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Tuesday delivered one of the sharpest semiconductor selloffs in recent memory, and the damage was concentrated in the names that had run the hottest.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index closed down roughly 3% to 4%, with intraday losses briefly exceeding 6% . The SOX underperformed the S&P 500 by approximately 5.8 percentage points, its worst single-day relative performance since January 2023 and the third worst since 2003 . The Roundhill Memory ETF, which had surged over 90% in just over a month, collapsed 11.8% in its worst day since launch .
Individual names felt the pressure across the board. Micron dropped 10.3%. SanDisk fell 11.1%. Western Digital lost 9.3%. Seagate shed 7.8%. Intel declined 11%. Qualcomm tumbled 14.9%. Credo Technology dropped 12.6% . Nvidia held up better than peers, down only about 1.2%, one of the smallest declines in the index .
The selloff followed an extraordinary run. The 30 semiconductor stocks in the SOX were up an average of 73% year-to-date through Monday . The sector had added roughly $3.8 trillion in market capitalization over just six weeks . A correction from those levels was always a question of timing, not probability.
Three triggers lined up to puncture the momentum.
First, South Korea's presidential chief of staff floated a "citizen dividend" funded by AI-era tax revenue in a social media post. The proposal sent the KOSPI down as much as 5.1% in minutes, wiping out roughly $300 billion in market capitalization . Foreign investors dumped an estimated $3.8 billion of Korean shares. The official later clarified the remarks were personal opinion and not formal policy discussions, but the selloff in U.S. memory names did not reverse .
Second, the hot April CPI print at 3.8% rattled the growth trade. Analysts flagged concerns that sticky inflation could slow the data-center buildout if companies pull back on AI investment, directly hitting demand for chips . The faster-than-estimated core reading halted the rally in equities, and traders boosted bets on a Fed rate hike .
Third, buyer exhaustion was overdue. Jefferies analysts noted the sector was moving lower with "some buyer exhaustion following the recent moves" . The nearly 70% surge in chipmakers in just six weeks had spurred calls for a breather . Gains had climbed "about as vertical a move as veteran investors can remember" . When positioning gets that extended, even a modest catalyst can trigger a cascade.
The structural thesis for semiconductors has not changed. AI demand for compute remains insatiable, agentic AI models run 24/7, memory supply is sold out under binding multi-year contracts, and new capacity is years away . Micron still trades at roughly 9 times projected earnings, far below the S&P 500 average . What changed on Tuesday was sentiment positioning and the reminder that governments may want a seat at the AI profit table.
For crypto markets, this matters as a sentiment signal. When the highest-momentum equity sector corrects sharply, risk appetite tends to cool across asset classes. AI-themed tokens and broader altcoin positioning are particularly sensitive to shifts in the AI narrative. The windfall tax conversation introduces a regulatory risk premium that the market had not been pricing in, and that premium does not disappear overnight just because an official clarifies their remarks.
The semis had posted gains in 24 of the prior 28 sessions . A pause after that kind of run is normal market behavior. The question is whether Tuesday marks a healthy reset or the start of a deeper repricing that accounts for both valuation extension and emerging political risk around AI profits.
Do you see the windfall tax conversation as a one-day scare or the beginning of a genuine regulatory overhang for AI-linked assets? And if semiconductor momentum fades further, do you expect AI-themed crypto tokens to decouple or follow the equity sector lower?
This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
#SemiconductorSectorTakesAHit