Investors are pouring money quickly into a new ETF that invests in companies involved with photonics and photolithography.
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Investors are pouring money quickly into a new ETF that invests in companies involved with photonics and photolithography.
The bond market seems worried about oil prices and inflation, implying investors foresee a potential interest-rate hike ahead.
The market’s appetite for memory chip makers is feverish, but this subset of the semiconductor industry might be looking a bit too hot. Memory companies have been the latest beneficiaries of the artificial-intelligence investing craze, a boom that has lifted the entire semiconductor sector. The reason is its focus on memory chips and its heavy concentration on three companies in particular: Micron Technology and South Korea’s SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics.
Intel’s turnaround story may make Boeing a better comparison than Nvidia or TSMC as investors focus less on near-term earnings and more on long-term execution.
Modine Manufacturing has missed out on the recent semiconductor rally despite a pivotal role in data centers.
This inverse ETF lets you profit from a major decline in the S&P 500.
For much of 2026, the chip trade has been the only show on Wall Street. The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) is still up 77% year to date through May 11, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) has more than doubled, and Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) has been the comeback story of the cycle. But today, the bid disappeared. SOXX ... Chip Stocks Are Bleeding Today. The 2018 and 2022 Selloffs Tell You Exactly What Comes Next
Semiconductor ETFs like SOXX offer broad exposure as AI-driven memory revenues are projected to nearly triple in 2026.
Ambiq Micro reports strong quarterly sales growth, driven by demand for remote artificial-intelligence solutions.
Intel and other semiconductor companies were falling back on Tuesday morning after a Monday rally that sent multiple chip stocks to all-time highs. Intel was down 3% in premarket trading after having more than doubled in the past month through Monday’s close. Demand for artificial-intelligence infrastructure has boosted chip stocks across the board.
Stocks hover at record highs as some strategists signal a melt-up.
If the upcoming initial public offering of artificial-intelligence chip maker Cerebras is any measure, the bull market in semiconductors is still on. When Cerebras filed its IPO paperwork earlier this month, the company intended to sell 28 million shares at a price between $115 and $125, raising $3.5 billion at the top end of the range. It was up 0.7% in premarket trading Monday.
Market pullbacks can happen when investors least expect it, when there are fewer risks on the radar or complacency about the existing slate of risks on the table. While market corrections can be scary to move through, I think that the most horrific thing about corrections is the potential to impair one’s returns by attempting ... History Suggests Market Pullbacks Hit Tech Harder — Here Are the Two Names at Risk Right Now
The AI semiconductor trade has a passport, and lately it has been stamped more often in Seoul than in San Jose. On a recent Reuters Morning Bid podcast segment titled Chip stock boom, the host pushed back on the assumption that the chip rally is a Wall Street phenomenon, pointing to Korea’s market surge as ... This Asian Stock Market Is up 75% This Year: ‘The Chip Boom Isn’t a Wall Street Story’
The blue-chip index was up just 11 points, or essentially flat, in Friday trading, compared to a 1.3% gain for the Nasdaq. The Dow only includes 30 stocks, has a higher weighting toward financials and industrials and a lower weighting toward tech, and only weighs individual members by stock price rather than market cap. Case in point: The iShares Semiconductor ETF is up 3.9% and the Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF is up 1.1%.
Taiwan and South Korea sit at the center of the global chip supply chain, and three exchange-traded funds offer the most direct way to hold that exposure: the iShares MSCI Taiwan ETF (NYSEARCA:EWT), the iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (NYSEARCA:EWY), and the iShares Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:SOXX). Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing sits at the center of the ... EWT, EWY, and SOXX: The Only 3 ETFs You Need for Semiconductor Dominance
In this episode, Larry McDonald joins the MoneyShow MoneyMasters Podcast to discuss what he calls the "Great Migration" of capital from tech and growth stocks into hard assets. The founder of The Bear Traps Report explains why the traditional 60/40 portfolio is failing – and why investors should consider a significant allocation to commodities like gold, silver, base metals, and energy.
The Dow just can’t keep above 50,000. The blue-chip index was down 200 points, or 0.4%, to 49,718 after trading as high as 50,130. The S&P 500 was down 0.3%. The Nasdaq was down 0.2%. A slide in chip stocks after Arm's earnings accelerated.
On Tuesday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chair Dan Caine held a morning press conference to review “Project Freedom,” which was America’s latest attempt to open the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping by using naval escorts. Restricted shipping amid the Iran-U. S. conflict sent global benchmark crude oil prices up more than $30 per barrel. Investors got their update, although President Donald Trump suspended “Project Freedom” on Wednesday.
The semiconductor sector continues to absorb capital at a pace tied to the AI infrastructure buildout, and three exchange-traded funds offer distinct angles on it: iShares Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:SOXX), VanEck Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:SMH), and First Trust Nasdaq Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:FTXL). Each holds Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD), whose Q1 earnings report, released today, reinforces what the ... Semiconductor Leaders SOXX, SMH, and FTXL Are Crushing It on AI Infrastructure Demand