Bloodletting in Semiconductor Stocks Kicks Off September: Nvidia -11.7% Regular & Late Trading, Market Cap Drops by Half a Tesla

Nvidia

By Wolf Richter for WOLF STREET.

Nvidia, the poster boy of the stock-market mania around Ai and semiconductors, plunged 9.5% in regular trading. In afterhours trading, it dropped another 2.6% to $105.40 a share, for a total drop of 11.7%. The afterhours drop came after Bloomberg reported that the DOJ had sent subpoenas to Nvidia, in an escalation of the ongoing antitrust investigation.

“Antitrust officials are concerned that Nvidia is making it harder to switch to other suppliers and penalizes buyers that don’t exclusively use its artificial intelligence chips,” Bloomberg said, citing its sources.

Nvidia’s market capitalization – which is important because it’s so huge – plunged by $279 billion in regular trading, the most ever lost in one day by one company. Including afterhours trading, it plunged by $342 billion, or by half a Tesla.

But it’s not a big deal because easy-come, easy-go, and Nvidia had similar one-day moves on the way up. The stock is now down 20% from its July 10th peak. And Nvidia wasn’t the only one.

The semiconductor bloodletting during regular hours included:

Nvidia [NVDA]: -9.5%
Intel [INTC]: -8.8%
Marvell Technology [MRVL]: -8.2%
Broadcom [AVGO]: -6.2%
AMD [AMD]: -7.8%
Qualcomm [QCOM]: -6.9%
Texas Instrument [TI]: -5.8%
Analog Devices [ADI]: -6.5%
ASML [ASML]: -6.5%
Applied Materials [AMAT]: -7.0%
Micron Technology [MU]: -8.0%
NPX Semiconductors [NXPI]: -7.9%
KLA [KLAC]: -9.5%

The VanEck Semiconductor ETF [SMH] plunged 7.5%, the biggest one-day drop since the March 2020 crash. The PHLX Semiconductor Index [SOX] plunged 7.8%. So that was a good day’s worth of work on the first trading day of September:

It wasn’t any kind of economic news, such as the sudden collapse of the consumer over Labor Day or the toppling of three big banks on Friday evening or the prediction by AI that the world would end, or whatever, that sank semiconductor stocks – and to a lesser extent stocks more broadly, with the S&P 500 down 2.1% today and the Nasdaq Composite down 3.3%. Instead of collapsing, consumer are doing just fine, and they went back to the punchbowl for refills.

So the Nasdaq composite dropped by 3.3% today to 17,136 and is down 8.1% from its all-time high on July 10.

If it drops another 6.7%, it’ll be back where it had first been in November 2021, with a big sell-off and a generational rally in between. T-bills did better than that since November 2021, but without all the fun and drama.

The action since the July 10 peak is not a good sight:

It’s just that Americans have been more bullish than ever on stocks, after years of huge rallies to where household allocations to stocks as a share of their financial assets reached record highs of 42% in Q2, easily surpassing the then-record of 37% in Q2 2000, according to JPMorgan estimates cited by the WSJ.

Q2 2000 was of course when stocks had begun the Dotcom Bust that would eventually take the S&P 500 down by 50% and the Nasdaq Composite by 78% over the next two-and-a-half years, after which it took the Nasdaq 13 years, including years of QE and 0%, to surpass its Dotcom Bubble high.

But investors consider this now irrelevant. Not going to happen again. Stocks will always go up. The Fed will restart QE every time shares dip a little, etc., etc. With investors so overexposed to stocks, especially to the biggest hottest stocks with ridiculous valuations, such as Nvidia, and overconfident that stocks will always rise, if then something twitches and the selling pressure suddenly surges, then there aren’t enough hardy souls left still willing to buy at these ridiculous prices, and the next layers of buyers – the dip buyers – will have to be enticed with even lower prices. But that has been a rough sport recently.

Source: Wolfstreet.com

Take the Survey at https://survey.energynewsbeat.com/

1031 Exchange E-Book

Crude Oil, LNG, Jet Fuel price quote

ENB Top News 
ENB
Energy Dashboard
ENB Podcast
ENB Substack

About Stu Turley 3977 Articles
Stuart Turley is President and CEO of Sandstone Group, a top energy data, and finance consultancy working with companies all throughout the energy value chain. Sandstone helps both small and large-cap energy companies to develop customized applications and manage data workflows/integration throughout the entire business. With experience implementing enterprise networks, supercomputers, and cellular tower solutions, Sandstone has become a trusted source and advisor.   He is also the Executive Publisher of www.energynewsbeat.com, the best source for 24/7 energy news coverage, and is the Co-Host of the energy news video and Podcast Energy News Beat. Energy should be used to elevate humanity out of poverty. Let's use all forms of energy with the least impact on the environment while being sustainable without printing money. Stu is also a co-host on the 3 Podcasters Walk into A Bar podcast with David Blackmon, and Rey Trevino. Stuart is guided by over 30 years of business management experience, having successfully built and help sell multiple small and medium businesses while consulting for numerous Fortune 500 companies. He holds a B.A in Business Administration from Oklahoma State and an MBA from Oklahoma City University.