US Stocks fell on July 16 (local time) as the semiconductor sector dragged down major indices, with the SOX semiconductor index plunging 4.29%. The Nasdaq Composite declined 1.47% to close at 25,881.95, while the S&P 500 dropped 0.51% to 7,533.77 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.20% to 52,552.97. TSMC reported a 77% surge in Q2 net profit but raised its capital expenditure forecast from $52-56 billion to $60-64 billion, triggering investor concerns about profit margins. Paul Nolte, market strategist at Murphy & Sylvest, attributed the weakness to the semiconductor sector's expanded weight in the S&P 500, noting it has grown from 8% three to four years ago to over 20% currently.
TSMC reported record Q2 results with net profit surging 77%, but the semiconductor bellwether's decision to raise its capital expenditure outlook from $52-56 billion to $60-64 billion sparked profit margin concerns across the sector. The SOX semiconductor index fell 4.29% on July 16 (local time), pressuring both the industry and broader market. Micron Technology and AMD declined 5.65% and 5.33% respectively, while Broadcom and Arm Holdings each dropped more than 5%.
Nolte stated the semiconductor selloff reflected investors beginning to calculate future demand dynamics, questioning what happens once chip demand is eventually satisfied. He described the market weakness as "purely a semiconductor weighting issue" within the S&P 500.
Memory semiconductor companies experienced particularly steep losses on July 16 (local time). SK Hynix ADR plummeted 13.69%, while SanDisk fell 12.63%. Western Digital declined 9.15%, and Seagate Technology and Intel dropped 10.00% and 5.91% respectively.
Major technology stocks that had rallied the previous day reversed course on July 16 (local time). Alphabet fell 4.44% following reports that the launch of its highest-performance AI model, Gemini 3.5 Pro, had been delayed. Meta declined 2.46%, Nvidia dropped 2.40%, and Amazon fell 1.99%.
UnitedHealth Group rose 1.16% after announcing strong Q2 results and raising its earnings guidance. GE Aerospace fell 4.08% despite raising its 2026 profit outlook.
US economic data released on July 16 (local time) remained broadly positive. June retail sales met expectations despite a slight deceleration in growth pace, and manufacturing activity in the Northeast region expanded. Through this week, over 87% of the 40 S&P 500 companies that have reported earnings exceeded Wall Street expectations.
Patrick Ryan, chief investment strategist at Madison Investments, assessed the market as "still strong when looking at earnings across the entire market capitalization spectrum." Ellen Zentner, chief economist at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, noted that despite various challenges, consumers continue spending and the labor market shows no signs of cracking, demonstrating the US economy's sustained resilience.
What caused US Stocks to fall on July 16? US Stocks declined on July 16 (local time) primarily due to a 4.29% plunge in the SOX semiconductor index. TSMC raised its capital expenditure forecast from $52-56 billion to $60-64 billion, triggering profit margin concerns despite reporting a 77% surge in Q2 net profit.
How much did memory chip stocks fall on July 16? Memory semiconductor stocks experienced particularly steep declines on July 16 (local time). SK Hynix ADR fell 13.69%, SanDisk dropped 12.63%, Western Digital declined 9.15%, and Seagate Technology fell 10.00%.
What percentage of S&P 500 companies reporting earnings beat expectations? Through this week, over 87% of the 40 S&P 500 companies that reported earnings exceeded Wall Street expectations, indicating a strong earnings season despite the semiconductor sector weakness.
Related News
US Stocks Open Mixed as TSMC Capex Guidance Weighs on Semiconductors
US Stocks Open Lower as Semiconductor Weakness Continues on July 16
Korean Stocks Fall 6.37% as Top Investors Buy Alteogen, Sell SK Hynix
Nasdaq Futures Drop 0.5% as Iran Strikes and Chip Weakness Weigh on Stocks