Global semiconductor stocks faced a broad sell-off on Tuesday after Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (OTC: SSNLF) released its latest second-quarter results, which failed to meet Wall Street's extremely high expectations for artificial intelligence (AI) chip demand. Despite forecasting a staggering year-over-year operating profit surge of approximately 19 times (around 1800%) and a net profit figure surpassing that of U.S. tech giants Apple Inc. and Nvidia Corporation, the company's shares plunged 8% on the day as the results did not satisfy the elevated standards set by the market's AI fervor.
This market reaction underscores a prevalent phenomenon on Wall Street during this AI-driven valuation cycle: even companies delivering extraordinary financial performance often fail to satisfy investors. Previously, similar post-earnings volatility has impacted Nvidia, as well as leading cybersecurity firms like CrowdStrike and Palo Alto Networks, whose shares also fell following their reports.
Dragged down by the sharp decline in Samsung's share price, South Korea's KOSPI index fell approximately 5% on the day. Shares of SK Hynix, the world's second-largest memory chip maker, which is scheduled to list on the Nasdaq this Friday, fell about 6%. SK Hynix's U.S. initial public offering (IPO) aims to raise $28 billion, making it the second-largest IPO in the U.S. market this year, following only SpaceX. Market analysis suggests that Tuesday's sell-off partly reflects an investor reassessment of expectations following the historic surge in memory chip prices, alongside preparations for capital allocation towards SK Hynix's massive subscription and listing this week.
The global semiconductor supply chain and related capital markets experienced significant ripple effects.
U.S. Semiconductor Stocks Show Significant Volatility
Major U.S. memory chip makers SanDisk and Micron Technology saw their shares fall roughly 7% and 5%, respectively. Intel's stock dropped 9%. Marvell Technology, Lam Research, and Applied Materials all declined more than 6%. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) fell approximately 6%. The iShares Semiconductor ETF, which tracks the industry's overall performance, also tumbled about 5%.
Industry Valuation Faces a Logical Reassessment
Driven by persistently strong demand from the AI sector, the global memory chip market has faced supply bottlenecks this year, granting related companies greater pricing power. Against this backdrop, Micron Technology and SanDisk have seen their shares achieve astonishing year-to-date gains of over 229% and 581%, respectively. However, widespread concern has emerged over whether continued AI infrastructure investment can sustain the currently elevated chip prices.
Industry analysts note that the soaring costs of core components like chips have forced downstream tech giants, including Apple and Microsoft, to raise retail prices on consumer products to pass on supply chain expenses. Furthermore, market rumors that Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is attempting to develop its own chips to circumvent external export controls and reduce reliance on U.S. firms like Nvidia added further pressure to the semiconductor sector's capital adjustment on Tuesday.
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