Chip manufacturers lose momentum after strong first half as sector sheds over $1 trillion
Semiconductor stocks surged 24% in the first half of 2026, then hit a wall as investors locked in profits and reassessed sky-high valuations
The semiconductor trade was the easiest money on Wall Street for six months. Then it wasn’t.
After rallying approximately 24% year-to-date through the first half of 2026, chip stocks ran headfirst into a wall of profit-taking, cautious corporate guidance, and valuation anxiety. The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index, better known as the SOX, suffered its largest single-day drop since March 2020, erasing over $1 trillion in market value.
The June reckoning
June 5, 2026, was the day the music stopped, at least temporarily. The Nasdaq fell 4% that session, its worst daily performance since April 2025, driven in part by concerns over conservative forecasts from Broadcom.
The damage was spread across the sector’s biggest names. AMD’s stock dropped 10.86%, closing at $466.38. Intel fell 11.28%, finishing the day at $99.17. South Korean chip stocks plummeted between 9% and 12% during the same period. Micron experienced a 13.6% decline in late June.
The fundamentals haven’t actually broken
TSMC reported strong revenue growth in May 2026, signaling that the foundry business feeding the world’s appetite for AI and memory chips is still humming. Analysts project global chip sales could reach or exceed $900 billion to $975 billion in 2026.
The top 10 global chip companies commanded a combined market capitalization of approximately $9.5 trillion as of mid-December 2025, up 46% year-on-year. That kind of concentration of value in a single sector creates its own gravitational pull, attracting capital on the way up and amplifying volatility on the way down.
What this means for investors
The Broadcom guidance scare that helped trigger the June sell-off is instructive. When a single company’s conservative outlook can knock 4% off the Nasdaq in a day, it tells you the market is priced for perfection.
The risk for investors who bought the rally near its peak is straightforward: even if the semiconductor industry delivers on those $900 billion-plus sales projections, the stocks may have already priced in several quarters of that growth. The gap between “great business” and “great stock” is particularly wide in a sector where combined market caps recently sat at $9.5 trillion.
Watching for signs of stabilization in the SOX index, monitoring order flow data from foundries like TSMC, and paying close attention to earnings calls from Nvidia and AMD will be the clearest signals of whether this correction has further to run.