Stock Markets June 23, 2026 09:55 AM

Semiconductor ETF Slides as Global Chip Sell-Off Ripples Into U.S. Markets

South Korea’s steep market drop and bearish investor warnings combine with Micron earnings jitters to push SOXX sharply lower

By Caleb Monroe
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MU SOXX

The iShares Semiconductor ETF plunged early in the session after a severe sell-off in global technology shares, led by a near-10% collapse in South Korean chip stocks that triggered a market circuit breaker. Concerns about SK Hynix slowing AI memory expansion, prominent bearish commentary on the AI hardware trade, and pre-earnings profit-taking in Micron weighed on sentiment and reverberated through U.S. semiconductor names.

Semiconductor ETF Slides as Global Chip Sell-Off Ripples Into U.S. Markets
MU SOXX
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Key Points

  • iShares Semiconductor ETF fell 6.1% in morning trading to $614.82 amid a global tech sell-off - sectors affected: semiconductors, technology, memory hardware.
  • South Korea's KOSPI dropped 9.99% on June 23, triggering a 20-minute circuit breaker; Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix fell roughly 12.3% and 12.5%, respectively - impacts extend to Asian equity markets and foreign investor flows.
  • Investor skepticism on the AI hardware investment thesis from figures like Dan Niles and pre-earnings profit-taking in Micron intensified selling pressure - impacts on AI infrastructure spending and memory chip demand.

The iShares Semiconductor ETF moved sharply lower in early U.S. trading, sliding 6.1% to $614.82 after a broad technology downturn originating in Asia spilled into U.S. chip stocks.

The rout was anchored by an historic drop in South Korean semiconductor names. South Korea's KOSPI plunged 9.99% on June 23, a fall severe enough to trigger a market-wide circuit breaker that halted trading for 20 minutes. Major Korean chip companies were deeply affected, with Samsung Electronics falling about 12.3% and SK Hynix dropping about 12.5% as foreign investors sold billions of dollars of shares.

Reports that SK Hynix is slowing its AI memory expansion sharpened investor unease, undermining confidence in the global AI hardware buildout thesis and prompting selling across related stocks. That news combined with weaker sentiment among some high-profile market participants to accelerate the decline.

Prominent tech investor Dan Niles publicly trimmed his semiconductor positions and warned that the AI trade is likely to hit a near-term "speed bump." He highlighted doubts about whether hyperscale cloud providers can earn sufficient returns on the massive AI infrastructure investments they are making, and pointed to an emerging trend of companies routing workloads to cheaper AI models to rein in costs.

Adding to the pressure on U.S. memory stocks, Micron shares tumbled sharply heading into the semiconductor maker's scheduled fiscal third-quarter earnings report. The sell-off in Micron was driven by pre-earnings profit-taking, a broader pullback in AI-linked names and renewed worries about corporate spending on AI infrastructure. Investors are treating Micron's upcoming results as a de facto report card for the broader memory and AI semiconductor sector.

Market moves were not limited to the United States and South Korea. In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Technology index fell 3.2%, with chipmaker STMicroelectronics and Dutch semiconductor equipment maker ASMI each off by more than 7% during the session.

Heightening investor caution were indications of a potentially more hawkish U.S. Federal Reserve. Fed funds futures were pricing in a roughly 75% probability of a rate hike by September, a dynamic that supports a higher-for-longer interest rate outlook and can make richly valued technology stocks more vulnerable.

Analysts and market commentators framed the pullback as profit-taking in a sector that had run hard, rather than evidence of widespread deterioration in underlying business fundamentals. Still, with the ETF trading near its 52-week high of $655.95 heading into the session, the combination of cross-border contagion, hawkish rate signals and pre-Micron nervousness was sufficient to produce a sharp reversal in chip-related assets.

Intraday market data in parts of the session also showed Micron down 8.81% and the SOXX ETF off about 5.55% on certain quotes, underscoring the volatility sweeping through semiconductor names during the sell-off.


Summary: A dramatic sell-off in South Korean chip stocks, concerns over SK Hynix's AI memory expansion plans, bearish commentary from a prominent tech investor and pre-earnings weakness in Micron combined to push the iShares Semiconductor ETF sharply lower in morning U.S. trading.

Risks

  • Potential for a more hawkish U.S. Federal Reserve - fed funds futures implied about a 75% chance of a rate hike by September, a scenario that could pressure richly valued technology and semiconductor stocks.
  • Contagion from Asian chip peers - the sharp decline in South Korean semiconductor names and reports of SK Hynix slowing AI memory expansion may spread volatility and investor caution across the global chip supply chain and related equipment makers.
  • Earnings uncertainty at Micron - with Micron's fiscal third-quarter report looming and the stock already down sharply ahead of the release, the results are being treated as an industry barometer that could trigger further market moves depending on the outcome.

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