Signs of cooling have emerged in the market’s “AI trade” tied to semiconductors, memory chips, and data center supply chains, as investors reassess whether AI infrastructure spending can be sustained. According to Odaily, the shift reflects growing scrutiny of the durability of current investment levels in chips and data centers.
AI-related chip stocks such as Micron Technology and SanDisk have recently faced pressure. Samsung Electronics reported record results for the second quarter, but revenue missed market expectations; its shares fell nearly 7% and weighed on the broader AI chip sector.
The market has also expressed concern that hyperscalers may slow AI infrastructure investment, potentially prompting a repricing of the current AI boom cycle driven by GPUs, high-bandwidth memory (HBM), and data center construction.
In South Korea, memory chip maker SK hynix has fallen about 25% from its historical high ahead of a planned U.S. listing. Its IPO has also drawn some funds away from existing chip stocks.
Analysts said that after a large SpaceX IPO pushed up valuations of AI-related assets, investors are reassessing the next phase of growth expectations for the AI rally. They added that if enthusiasm for AI investment continues to weaken, some capital could rotate from the AI supply chain into other risk assets, including crypto assets.
AI TRENDS | AI Infrastructure Investment Cools as Investors Reassess Chip and Data Center Spending
2026-07-07 14:23:59
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