The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index fell 5.3% on Wednesday, dragged down by a 9% plunge in storage stocks led by SanDisk and Kioxia.
"One company's blowout earnings mean someone else is paying the price," said Carol Schleif, chief investment officer at BMO Family Office, referencing the dynamic where memory chipmakers' strong results come at the expense of hyperscaler customers footing the bill for rising chip costs.
SanDisk tumbled 11%, Kioxia ADR dropped 10.6%, Micron Technology fell 8.6%, Western Digital lost 8.1% and Seagate Technology declined 6.9%. The storage sub-index slid as much as 9%, its biggest single-day drop in months. The selloff pushed the Nasdaq Composite down 0.6% and the S&P 500 0.2%, while the Nasdaq 100 lost 1.3%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.1%, extending its divergence from technology-heavy indices as investors rotated into industrial and cyclical names.
Six of the 11 major S&P 500 sectors moved lower, with technology and consumer discretionary stocks leading the declines. Industrial stocks gained 2.2%, the best-performing sector, as investors rotated out of high-valuation tech names into cyclicals. Consumer staples also fell as the inflation outlook weighed on household spending power.
The selloff in storage names echoed a June rout triggered by reports that SK Hynix was slowing its high-bandwidth memory expansion — a move analysts interpreted as a margin-driven reallocation rather than a demand collapse. Memory makers have been running the market tight, with Samsung flagging a 146% DRAM average selling price jump in the first quarter and SK Hynix reporting mid-60% margins, keeping pricing power with sellers. The divergence between memory and logic names was stark: while storage-focused stocks cratered, Nvidia fell only about 3.6% during the June selloff, according to Wedbush, which framed the drop as a buying opportunity with enterprise demand intact.
The decline threatens to erase gains from a rally that had lifted the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index toward its strongest quarter on record, according to LSEG data. Traders pointed to lingering concerns over debt-funded AI spending by hyperscalers and expectations the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates by 25 basis points before year-end after inflation breached 4% in May. The U.S. Commerce Department reported that inflation accelerated above 4% for the first time in three years, driven by higher energy prices, potentially drawing the Fed closer to raising rates. Apple slid 6.1% in late June after hiking iPad and MacBook prices to counter surging memory and storage chip costs, showing how higher chip prices are rippling through the technology supply chain. For Micron, which had surged 15.7% on June 25 after beating earnings estimates, the reversal represents a sharp turn in sentiment toward a sector that had been the market's biggest winner this year.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.