Chip rout drags down stocks as investors rotate out of tech – Sherwood News

Home Technology Chip rout drags down stocks as investors rotate out of tech – Sherwood News
Chip rout drags down stocks as investors rotate out of tech – Sherwood News

Information technology and energy were today’s losers as oil prices slid on reports that Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic is normalizing.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 fell sharply as chip stocks and AI giants plunged, while the Russell 2000 closed higher. The Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF gained, as losses were concentrated in tech and energy, the only two sectors to decline today.
Oil prices slid on reports that Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic is normalizing, though President Trump’s threat to retaliate against Iran tempered the decline.
Bitcoin dropped as traders debated whether the AI trade unwind, Strategy’s outsized position, or macro factors are to blame for recent weakness. Solana dropped after SOL Strategies, a solana treasury company, sold more than 12% of its entire stash.
Stocks that moved higher:
Travel stocks got a boost from the drop in oil prices, as Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue, Carnival, Norwegian, and Royal Caribbean rose.
DraftKings soared after reporting $1.3 billion in trading volume on its prediction markets.
JM Smucker rose after Q4 earnings and revenue beat expectations, with its new full-year earnings forecast coming in mostly above consensus estimates.
Roblox ticked up following a Reuters report that Russia may lift its ban on the platform.
Applied Digital ticked higher after unveiling a new lease agreement with an undisclosed US-based hyperscaler worth at least $5.2 billion.
Stocks that moved lower:
Micron sank, leading a broad semiconductor sell-off driven by aggressive profit-taking on stocks that in some cases have more than tripled this year.
The chip sell-off dragged Marvell Technology, AMD, Intel, Nvidia, and TSMC lower.
Apple fell following the kickoff of its 2026 Worldwide Developers Conference, where it showcased a new AI-powered Siri and iOS 27 features.
Rivian dropped on the launch day of its R2 SUV as shoppers pointed out “out of control” lease prices.
Salesforce fell as Business Insider reported the company is laying off employees in another round of cuts.
Super Micro Computer fell around 9.5% at one point before the bell after announcing $7 billion in equity and equity-linked financing plans late on Tuesday, as the company looks to raise funds to satisfy increased demand for its advanced AI servers.
In a press release, SMCI outlined plans to issue $1.25 billion in common stock and $3.75 billion worth of depositary shares, which reflect fractional interests in the company’s newly-issued convertible preferred stock, as part of its underwritten public offering, in addition to selling up to $2 billion of shares in an at-the-market offering slated to start no earlier than the third quarter of 2026.
Super Micro stated that a portion of the funds would be used for the “purchase of components to satisfy the AI orders that the Company has received in recent weeks for its advanced AI servers,” disclosing that it has received $39 billion in AI server orders from more than 20 customers in the last few weeks.
Travel stocks are climbing on Tuesday, with West Texas Intermediate crude futures down more than 3.4% as of 3 p.m. ET, largely on traders’ hopes for an improving situation with Iran.
The New York Times reported that American officials think Iran could agree to a 15-year suspension of uranium enrichment. Crude futures had spiked briefly on Tuesday following President Trump’s Truth Social post that the US must respond to the downing of a US Apache helicopter by Iran, but prices remain lower on the day, boosting US travel stocks.
Shares of Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, and JetBlue were all up at least 4% an hour before market close. Cruise lines Carnival, Norwegian, and Royal Caribbean were similarly up. Travel companies have been rocked by higher fuel costs in the months since the war in Iran began.
It’s soccer summer, Knicks in five, baseball’s back, and everyone watching the game is looking down at their phone. After launching a prediction market platform in December, DraftKings is ready to ride this wave. And on Tuesday, the traditional sports betting company announced it actually had something to show for it.
Consumer trading volume in the month of May grew 24% to $1.3 billion and total trading volume increased 34% to $3.1 billion, according to a DraftKings SEC filing. Investors responded by lifting the stock 10% on Tuesday.
FanDuel parent company Flutter Entertainment was also trading higher.
Both sports betting companies reported upbeat earnings last quarter, besting Wall Street expectations, and have gained over the past month following declines of 49% and 23% since January, respectively.
DraftKings and FanDuel have both struggled as Kalshi and Polymarket encroach on their customers. Sports betting has been key to the growth of prediction markets, making up 39% of total trading volume on Kalshi and 80% on Polymarket since July 2024.
Rivian is sinking on Tuesday, the launch day of its highly anticipated R2 SUV.
The EV maker’s shares are down more than 7% on Tuesday afternoon, erasing a chunk of the gains they raked in during their recent 10-day winning streak.
Aside from a broad market sell-off and some selling the R2 launch news, online chatter also reveals some customer disappointment with lease prices for the new model. The performance trim lease prices are listed at $829 a month on Rivian’s site, close to the monthly price of the more expensive R1S. A Reddit post referred to those rates as “out of control” and “a huge disappointment.”
The R2 was announced as a lower-cost $45,000 SUV but is launching at higher-trim levels priced closer to $60,000. Rivian’s larger R1S starts at around $77,000. Rivian has implied annual R2 deliveries of between 20,000 and 25,000 units this year.
Chipmakers, artificial intelligence giants, and other highly valued tech stocks plunged Tuesday, dragging major US stock indexes deep into the red as the recent chip and AI complex comeback abruptly fizzled.
The Invesco QQQ Trust, which tracks the Nasdaq 100, is off around 3% on the day, and S&P 500 is down almost 2%.
The iShares Semiconductor ETF is also sinking, effectively giving up all the gains it saw yesterday as it surged to one of its best days of the year.
Wall Street initially opened in positive territory, but enthusiasm rapidly deteriorated midday as investors seemed to aggressively lock in profits on volatile, high-growth semiconductor stocks that, until recently, had been shooting upward.
This pivot follows a brutal trading day last Friday when momentum stocks collided with a rosy jobs report, profit-taking, and perhaps some very belated pessimism triggered by disappointing guidance from Broadcom, sending a host of previously bid-up names falling.

Many of those same shares are tumbling on Tuesday:
Micron completely flipped its intraday trajectory, plummeting over 9% at one point after gaining in early-morning trading. The memory provider has still more than tripled its valuation since the beginning of 2026. AMD shares also plummeted.
Marvell Technology jumped nearly 10% yesterday and advanced further soon after the opening bell, but reversed course midday and was down double digits, on pace for its second-worst day this year. The company was recently selected to join the S&P 500 Index effective June 22.
Intel is sinking after jumping in yesterdays session on a report that Google and Nvidia are considering turning to the chipmaker as a backup supplier to TSMC.
Apple’s shares are selling down following the kickoff of its Worldwide Developers Conference yesterday, where it showcased the new AI-powered version of Siri and the trust and safety features of iOS 27.
The tech-driven slide overshadowed a positive macroeconomic buffer from the energy sector, with oil prices sliding. The relief in crude costs came after ongoing negotiations signaled that shipping traffic through the crucial Strait of Hormuz is normalizing, according to Reuters, though this drop was tempered by a threat from President Trump to retaliate against Iran for an attack on a US helicopter in the strait.

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