- JPMorgan strategists led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou warn that the rebound in chip stocks to record highs is being accompanied by rising volatility — a pattern that preceded the sector’s 10%+ selloff in early June and could trigger self-reinforcing VaR-driven liquidations.
- A Bank of America survey found that long bets on chipmakers are now the most crowded trade among global fund managers, heightening the risk of rapid unwinding if volatility breaches investors’ Value-at-Risk limits.
- JPMorgan’s analysis shows semiconductor stocks now represent a share of global indexes far exceeding their revenue weight — at 6x revenue representation, more than double the equivalent ratio for Magnificent Seven stocks in the S&P 500.
- Market liquidity tends to dry up before VaR shocks, JPMorgan notes, and both volatility and crowding are currently elevated — the same pre-conditions present before the early-June chip stock rout.
What Happened?
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has reclaimed an all-time high after slumping more than 10% in early June on concerns that the AI trade was overheating. But JPMorgan strategist Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou flagged a troubling pattern: the rebound has been accompanied by higher volatility rather than calmer conditions, a dynamic that typically precedes what he calls a “VaR shock” — a scenario where sharp portfolio moves force investors to cut positions to stay within their risk limits even if they remain bullish on the underlying trade. “The proliferation of VaR-sensitive investors raises the sensitivity of markets to self-reinforcing, volatility-induced selling,” he wrote.
Why It Matters?
The semiconductor sector’s valuation disconnect from fundamentals is stark: chip stocks’ share of global indexes is six times their share of global revenues — more than twice the equivalent multiple for the Magnificent Seven. That level of multiple expansion leaves little room for disappointment, and the crowded positioning documented by BofA means exits could be disorderly. The VaR shock risk is particularly relevant right now because two preconditions JPMorgan identified — rising volatility into a rally and thinning market liquidity — are both present. A market tantrum in semiconductors would have broad spillover effects given chipmakers’ weight in major indices and their centrality to the AI investment thesis.
What’s Next?
The next major catalyst for the chip trade is Nvidia’s upcoming earnings and any fresh signals from hyperscalers on capex trajectories. In the near term, traders will be watching whether volatility in the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index continues to creep higher or begins to normalize as the Iran deal risk-on mood sustains. JPMorgan’s Panigirtzoglou has previously identified VaR shocks as among the hardest market moves to time — they tend to materialize quickly and recover just as fast, but not before inflicting significant short-term damage on leveraged and VaR-constrained portfolios.
Source: Bloomberg












