Market Turmoil Spreads Across Asia
Stocks move fast when the mood shifts. Just ask anyone who owned SK Hynix shares this week.
The downturn began with American chip companies during overnight trading and then extended to Asian exchanges before they opened for business.
Samsung Electronics fell more than 7%. In Japan, testing‑equipment maker Advantest slid more than 6%, SoftBank Group tumbled 7%, and Tokyo Electron lost over 5%.
The damage reached back to the United States too. Micron Technology shares fell 8%. Intel slid more than 4%. Lam Research and AMD each declined approximately 3%.
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The decline occurred as investors took profits, with mounting concerns about AI spending. SK Hynix had already experienced its sharpest single‑day drop on Monday, and the stock has kept seeing huge swings since its U.S. listing last week. The volatility underscores how sensitive semiconductor stocks have become to any shift in sentiment about AI‑related capital expenditure. With AI spending under renewed scrutiny, chipmakers are especially vulnerable to profit‑taking after sharp rallies.
The heightened volatility in chip stocks has been building for weeks. SK Hynix's U.S. listing last week gave investors a new way to trade the stock, but it also amplified price swings as traders adjusted positions. Meanwhile, earnings from major AI companies have led to increased scrutiny on capital expenditure plans, with some analysts questioning whether the massive investments in AI infrastructure can generate returns quickly enough to justify current valuations.
The rout began after U.S. chip stocks tumbled on Wednesday, triggered by profit‑taking and renewed skepticism over the sustainability of AI‑fueled growth. Asian markets, which often follow Wall Street's lead, opened sharply lower as traders reacted to the overnight losses. The selling pressure was compounded by the fact that semiconductor stocks have become a dominant force in global equity markets, making any downturn in the sector felt far beyond the chip industry itself.
How Big Are Chip Stocks Right Now?
For context, at the peak of the dot‑com bubble in 2000, semiconductors made up slightly more than 8% of the index. The historical average is between 2% and 5%, according to Louis Kondratev, a trader at XFUNDs. Twenty percent is a lot. Kondratev noted, "The recent pullback reflects how crowded semiconductor trades have become after a prolonged AI‑driven rally."
The current weighting of semiconductor stocks in the S&P 500 is unprecedented. At the height of the dot‑com era, chip stocks represented just over 8% of the benchmark, and the long-term typical range sits between 2% and 5%. This concentration means that any sustained downturn in the sector could have outsized effects on the broader market, a risk that investors are now reckoning with.
What This Means for Your Portfolio
For ordinary investors, the takeaway is that the sector's size is a concern. When one industry makes up a fifth of the whole market, its problems become everyone's problems. If chip stocks keep falling, they will drag the broader indexes down with them.
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