Latest News

As AI trade wobbles, chipmakers and other high flying stocks fall

As AI trade wobbles, chipmakers and other high flying stocks fall
As AI trade wobbles, chipmakers and other high flying stocks fall

This week, a rotation of the top winners from the recent rally gained momentum. Chip stocks fell to their'severest weekly decline for more than a month and sparked new concerns about the sustainability of AI-driven growth.

Investors pulled back on AI-exposed stocks that had fueled portfolio returns for much of this year.

If current levels are maintained, the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index has fallen 11% in one week. This would be its biggest drop since March 2025. The index is down almost 24% since its all-time June high. This would confirm that it has been in bear market.

Toni Meadows is the head of investment for BRI Wealth Management. She said, "The pullback reflects profit taking and increasing scrutiny of AI Capex Sustainability."

"Valuations in semi-conductor stock had priced near-perfect supply, which was always going leave stocks vulnerable at some point during what has been an explosive rise."

As of Friday's early trading, the chip index had risen nearly 62% this year.

Nvidia shares fell by 3% while Qualcomm and Broadcom each lost 2%. Micron and SanDisk, two of the most popular memory chip makers, each lost about 3%.

SpaceX dropped 4% after a 'last-second abort' of Starship’s 13th test flight. This was after the IPO price fell below $135 earlier this week.

SK Hynix shares listed in the U.S. fell 2.7%, and were trading at or near their initial offering price. Stock has dropped more than 9% in the last week.

The sharp turn around this month has been attributed to several factors by analysts.

Moonshot, a Chinese AI startup, unveiled Kimi K3, which it described as the world's biggest open-weight AI model. This has rekindled investor scrutiny over the pace at which U.S. technology companies can expect to see returns on their AI investments.

According to a report published on Thursday, Alphabet's Google has been months behind schedule in releasing Gemini 3.5 Pro, the most powerful AI model.

Globally, traders have experienced a volatile July. South Korea's KOSPI Index confirmed a bear-market last week. It is still up almost 70% this year. Japan's Nikkei fell into correction territory last Friday.

The tech sector in Europe is one of the biggest losers for this week, despite having achieved its largest quarterly increase since 2001.

The S&P 500 Momentum Index, which has outperformed the benchmark S&P 500 this year by more than two to one, has pulled back 10 percent in July, compared with a 0.8% decline in the overall market.

Strong predictions from Taiwan's TSMC and European semiconductor equipment manufacturer ASML failed to stop the slide.

Now, the focus is on two of Wall Street’s so-called "Magnificent Seven" group. Next week, Alphabet is scheduled to announce its quarterly earnings.

Space stocks also fell this week after rising earlier in the year, anticipating the possible boost that the sector could receive from SpaceX’s debut.

Rocket Lab and Intuitive Machines fell 3% and 4.4% respectively on Friday, and are expected to lose about 20% this week. (Reporting from Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru and Shashwat Chanhan; editing by Sriraj Kalluvila).

(source: Reuters)