- The Nasdaq composite fell 2.2% Tuesday as Micron and Sandisk — two of the year’s biggest winners with 2026 gains of 269% and 727% respectively — each dropped more than 13%, while South Korea’s Kospi plunged 10% on chip-sector panic.
- The Fed signaled last week that rates may still rise by year-end, with Chair Warsh saying officials are “unambiguously and unanimously” committed to returning inflation to 2% — a direct headwind for high-multiple AI and semiconductor stocks.
- AI model commoditization concerns are deepening: Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s CIO says AI models are becoming interchangeable, with usage flowing to the cheapest, making AI infrastructure more rate-sensitive and cyclical than previously assumed.
- Despite Tuesday’s carnage, six of the S&P 500’s 11 sectors posted gains, with consumer staples up 1.8% and healthcare up 1.4% — the Dow fell less than 0.1%, underscoring how concentrated the pain is in tech.
What Happened?
The AI-fueled rally in chip stocks went into violent reverse Tuesday, with Micron and Sandisk each shedding more than 13% — trimming their 2026 gains to 269% and 727% respectively. The Nasdaq composite dropped 2.2% while the S&P 500 lost 1.4%. South Korea’s Kospi fell 10%, driven by Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, in a session that analysts tied partly to rampant leverage and retail speculation that had amplified the AI chip trade. Eight of the 11 most-traded stocks among Interactive Brokers clients in the past week were tied to semiconductors. Micron faces an immediate earnings report Wednesday, adding a catalyst risk on top of an already battered tape.
Why It Matters?
The selloff is exposing a structural vulnerability that had been papered over by the relentless rally: semiconductor companies are fundamentally more cyclical and rate-sensitive than the hyperscalers (Google, Microsoft, Amazon) that led the prior bull market. With derivative traders now pricing in nearly two rate hikes this year, the discount rate headwind is hitting the highest-multiple names hardest. Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s Lisa Shalett articulated the bear case clearly: if AI models become commoditized, the economics of the infrastructure buildout deteriorate — and with higher rates, that deterioration is amplified. The AI capex cycle, she argued, is becoming more cyclical than the market has priced in.
What’s Next?
Micron’s earnings Wednesday are the next major data point — a miss or weak guidance would likely deepen the selloff, while a beat could provide a floor. The Fed’s rate trajectory remains the macro override: any softening in inflation data that reduces hike expectations would mechanically benefit high-multiple tech. Analysts at Morgan Stanley Wealth said they are “more inclined to be a buyer in today’s market than a seller” — noting that the broader economy remains strong and chip makers posted blockbuster profits last quarter. But until rate uncertainty clears, the stocks that rose the most face the sharpest reversal risk.
Source: The Wall Street Journal











