Stock Markets June 26, 2026 07:02 AM

UBS Scales Back Semiconductor and Hardware Weighting in AI Strategy After Rally

Bank takes profits from small- and mid-cap supply chain names while boosting defensive data-center and telecom exposure

By Priya Menon
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SOXX AMAT

UBS has trimmed its combined semiconductor and hardware allocation within its AI-focused investment strategy to roughly 61% from about 76%, selling into a rally led by Micron that pushed the SOXX index up 4% in one session and 10% in June. The bank reallocated capital into defensive parts of the AI ecosystem, and reiterated that medium-term AI demand remains intact even as it flagged risks tied to hyperscaler share weakness.

UBS Scales Back Semiconductor and Hardware Weighting in AI Strategy After Rally
SOXX AMAT
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Key Points

  • UBS reduced semiconductor and hardware exposure in its AI strategy to about 61% from roughly 76%, taking profits after a Micron-driven rally.
  • Profit-taking focused on small- and mid-cap supply chain companies spanning optics, controllers, capacitors, substrates, cooling, advanced packaging and analog components.
  • UBS increased defensive exposure to data center operators, telcos and select payments names to about 20% from under 1% in early June, while still retaining a significant overweight to semiconductors versus the Nasdaq 100.

UBS announced on Friday that it has reduced the combined weight of semiconductor and hardware holdings in its AI investment strategy to approximately 61% from near 76%. The move was presented as profit-taking after a rally - driven in part by Micron - lifted the semiconductor-focused SOXX index by 4% in a single session and by 10% over the month of June.

In a note from the bank's equity strategy team, UBS said the selling activity was concentrated in small- and mid-cap companies across a range of AI supply-chain niches. The areas cited include optics, baseboard management controllers, multilayer ceramic capacitors, substrates, cooling systems, advanced packaging and analog components. Those reductions represent a tactical trimming of exposure rather than an abandonment of the sector.

UBS emphasized that, despite the cutbacks, its AI strategy still maintains a material overweight to semiconductor and hardware stocks. The strategy remains roughly 20-25 percentage points overweight relative to the Nasdaq 100, which the bank estimates has about 42% of its exposure tied to AI semiconductors and hardware.

Concurrently, the bank said it materially increased allocations to more defensive segments of the AI ecosystem. Exposure to data center operators, telecommunications companies and selected payments names rose to around 20% from under 1% in early June. UBS said it targeted names with prudent balance sheets and stable dividend profiles as part of that shift.

UBS reiterated that the medium-term demand narrative for AI appears intact, supported by accelerated cloud adoption and growth in agentic AI workloads. Still, the bank cautioned that a notable decline in hyperscaler stocks could prompt management teams to cut capital expenditure commitments, a development that would pose downside risks to parts of the hardware and services supply chain. The note observed that the top five hyperscaler shares had fallen, on average, about 20% during June.

On specific semiconductor positioning, UBS said it continues to favor foundry exposure such as TSMC, semicaps including Applied Materials, memory names such as SK Hynix and select compute exposure. The bank also maintained a pronounced underweight to the so-called Magnificent Seven, which together account for roughly 18% of its portfolio weight.


Implications for markets and sectors: The rebalancing reflects UBS's effort to lock in gains in cyclical, supply-chain dependent semiconductor and hardware names while reallocating into income and stability-oriented parts of the AI ecosystem such as data centers, telcos and payments. The changes affect equipment suppliers, memory and foundry providers, and hyperscaler-related capex dynamics.

Risks

  • A sustained sell-off in hyperscaler stocks - already down an average of about 20% in June - could pressure management to reduce capital expenditure, negatively affecting hardware and services suppliers.
  • The bank's trimming of small- and mid-cap supply chain names introduces execution risk if demand remains stronger than anticipated, potentially limiting upside in those segments.

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