Chip stocks just hit new record highs. JPMorgan thinks that's a problem.
Not because the rally is wrong. The way it's moving could force big funds to sell shares they want to keep.
Why The Rebound Could Force Selling
The chip index - which tracks Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom - fell more than 10% earlier this month. The drop came on fears the AI trade had gotten too hot.
It then snapped back to a new high this week. The problem is what came with the rebound: bigger price swings.
Those swings can trigger what's called a VaR shock. VaR is short for Value-at-Risk - a cap on how much risk a fund can take.
The rule keeps funds from blowing up in a crash. But it kicks in based on price moves, not on whether the trade still works.
When swings get big enough, funds have to sell - even if they still like the stocks.
JPMorgan's team put it bluntly: more funds run these rules now, which means markets are quicker to feed selling that builds on itself.
The pattern matters because forced selling doesn't care about the business. It keeps hitting the bid until the model says stop.
VaR shocks have hit before. The August 2024 Japan stock crash and the 2018 swings blowup both played out the same way - swings spike, the rules say sell, prices fall too far, then bounce back.
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Volatility, Liquidity, And Valuation
Price swings tend to creep higher before one of these shocks hits. That's what happened before the early-June selloff.
Liquidity - how easy it is to buy and sell a stock without moving the price - also tends to dry up first.
Both signs are flashing again.
Then there's valuation. JPMorgan looked at how much space chip stocks take up in global indexes versus how much money they bring in.
The ratio is six to one. That's more than double the same gap for the Magnificent Seven - the seven biggest U.S. tech stocks.
The bottom line: chips are punching above their weight in portfolios, whether investors bought them on purpose or not.
What To Watch
The Bank of America survey shows chipmakers as the most crowded long trade among fund managers. That ties it all together.
Crowded trades work until they don't. The minute swings pick up, the rules force the door shut at the same time.
Forced selling tends to overshoot - funds cut positions until the swings calm down, even if it pushes prices below what the business justifies.
That's why JPMorgan is flagging chips now, not waiting for the next leg down.
The rally isn't broken. But the plumbing under it just got more fragile.
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