The AI trade, which incorporates semiconductors and memory stores, is showing signs of fatigue as investors reassess whether the extraordinary spending boom on chips and data centers can be sustained.
Semiconductor and memory stocks such as Micron Technology ( MU ) and Sandisk ( SNDK ) came under heavy pressure Tuesday after Samsung Electronics ( 005930 ) reported record second-quarter earnings but missed revenue estimates.
Shares still fell nearly 7%, extending a broader selloff across AI-linked chipmakers. Concerns are growing that hyperscalers could slow AI infrastructure spending.
Meanwhile, rival SK Hynix has fallen 25% from its all-time high ahead of its US listing this week, a deal that is also pulling investor capital away from existing chip stocks.
The weakness comes after a spectacular rally in AI infrastructure stocks this year, with Sandisk up more than 525%, Micron up over 120% and SK Hynix up about 225% in 2026.
Adding to the changing narrative, China’s Zhipu AI, one of the country’s leading artificial intelligence startups, is exploring a custom AI chip as demand for its open source GLM models increases, highlighting the emergence of cheaper AI ecosystems built around domestic hardware rather than cutting-edge US chips.
The move comes just weeks after SpaceX’s blockbuster IPO and amid elevated valuations across AI-related stocks. Investors are increasingly questioning whether the next phase of AI will require ever more GPUs and high-bandwidth memory, or whether more efficient models will reduce demand for the infrastructure that has fueled the AI rally.
Over the past year, bitcoin and the broader crypto market have suffered from the AI trade, and if investor enthusiasm for AI continues to fade, crypto bulls could see capital rotate back into digital assets.



