Semiconductor stocks tumbled Thursday as investors took profits from historic year-to-date rallies, with Intel and AMD leading a sector-wide pullback that dragged the iShares Semiconductor ETF down 6%.
Intel Corp. shares fell 6% to $119.83 and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. slid 5% to $511.67 at midday Thursday, leading a broad semiconductor selloff that erased billions in market value as traders rotated out of the year's best-performing sector.
"This is a valuation-driven reset after a parabolic run, not a fundamental breakdown," said Rachel Kim, semiconductor analyst at Edgen. "Intel is up more than 200% year to date and AMD has gained over 130%. A single-session pullback at these levels is the price of admission."
The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) dropped 6% to $561.49, with declines spreading across chip equipment makers, memory manufacturers, and photonics names. Applied Optoelectronics plunged 17%, while Coherent and Lumentum each fell 10%. Nvidia Corp. slipped 2%. The selling came despite a soft June jobs report — the U.S. economy added just 57,000 jobs, well below the 115,000 consensus estimate — that pushed the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a fresh intraday high and cooled rate-hike expectations.
The pullback interrupts what has been one of the most concentrated rallies in semiconductor history. Intel's 200% year-to-date gain has added roughly $470 billion in market capitalization, while AMD's 130% advance has pushed its valuation past $940 billion. The question for investors is whether the AI-infrastructure thesis that drove those gains can withstand a valuation reset.
Analyst optimism persists despite the selloff
The irony of Thursday's decline is that the news flow into the session was overwhelmingly positive. HSBC raised its Intel price target to $200 from $100 with a Buy rating, implying 60% upside from current levels, and called the foundry business "too good to ignore." Cantor Fitzgerald lifted its Intel target to $150 from $90, citing a generational AI-infrastructure buildout that could push industry revenue to roughly $3 trillion by 2029.
Reports have surfaced of Intel Foundry engagements with Tesla Inc., SpaceX, Apple Inc., and Alphabet Inc.'s Google, including possible Google TPU orders. The foundry unit, however, posted a roughly $2.4 billion operating loss in Q1 2026, and Chief Executive Officer Lip-Bu Tan has yet to convert those engagements into shipped revenue.
For AMD, UBS projected that annual server CPU revenue could reach $50 billion by 2030 on agentic AI demand, with a $670 price target. The stock's decline Thursday appeared driven by sympathy selling rather than any company-specific catalyst.
What to watch next
The immediate catalyst is Intel's Q2 2026 earnings report on July 23, which will test whether foundry engagements are converting to revenue and whether the Data Center and AI segment can build on its Q1 performance. For the broader sector, hyperscaler capital expenditure commentary from mega-cap tech earnings in the coming weeks will provide the next read on AI chip demand.
Intel shares, trading at roughly 35 times forward earnings after the pullback, and AMD at about 40 times, still command premium valuations that leave little room for execution missteps. The long-term AI-infrastructure thesis behind both companies remains intact, but Thursday's selloff is a reminder that even the strongest narratives require periodic repricing.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.