Semiconductor stocks have become the most crowded trade in global markets, and JPMorgan warns the positioning risk alone could trigger a correction disconnected from fundamentals.
Semiconductor stocks have become the most crowded trade in global markets, and JPMorgan warns the positioning risk alone could trigger a correction disconnected from fundamentals.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategists warned that semiconductor stocks' extreme valuations and crowded positioning have created conditions for a VaR-driven selloff, where forced deleveraging could amplify any downturn regardless of fundamentals.
"The risk of market tantrums is rising as sharp swings in semiconductor stocks force some investors to cut allocations," Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, global market strategist at JPMorgan, said.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index fell more than 10% earlier this month on AI overheating fears before rebounding to a record high. The rebound came with elevated volatility, JPMorgan noted, creating conditions for VaR shocks — scenarios where big market moves cause investors to breach risk limits, forcing position reductions even if they still believe in the trade.
The warning comes as the Bank of America Global Fund Manager Survey confirmed "long semiconductors" as the most crowded trade globally. JPMorgan's analysis shows the semiconductor industry's weight in major equity indices has grown roughly six times faster than its revenue share — more than double the ratio for the Magnificent Seven — indicating valuation expansion has far outpaced fundamental improvement.
VaR Feedback Loop Threatens AI Trade
The concentration risk is compounded by the widespread adoption of VaR-based risk management frameworks among institutional investors. Once volatility breaches a portfolio's risk threshold, the mechanism triggers automatic position reduction, creating a self-reinforcing cycle: price declines push volatility higher, which forces more selling, which drives prices lower still.
"Major risk is not in fundamentals but in position concentration," the JPMorgan team wrote. If volatility continues to rise, some investors may be forced to cut positions, potentially triggering a significant correction disconnected from underlying business performance.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index's rapid recovery from its June selloff — it dropped more than 10% before bouncing to new highs — has done little to alleviate the crowding concern. The index's weight in global benchmarks has expanded far beyond what revenue growth alone would justify, JPMorgan said.
Broadcom Rebound Shows Fragility
The dynamics are visible in individual names. Broadcom Inc. shares fell 14% in June after the company's guidance disappointed investors, triggering a broader selloff across AI-related semiconductor stocks. The stock has since rebounded 5.17% after JPMorgan analysts Harlan Sur and Mayur Ramdhani reiterated their overweight rating and $580 price target, implying roughly 54% upside.
Yet the rebound masks lingering fragility. Broadcom remains about 17% below its record closing high of $481.57 reached on June 2. While 51 of 55 analysts covering the stock rate it a Buy, according to FactSet, the June selloff demonstrated how quickly sentiment can shift in a crowded trade.
So What for Investors
For investors, JPMorgan's warning suggests the biggest near-term risk to semiconductor stocks may not be slowing AI demand but the mechanical unwinding of concentrated positions. If VaR thresholds are breached, the resulting forced selling could hit the entire AI complex — including Nvidia Corp., Advanced Micro Devices Inc., and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. — regardless of individual company fundamentals. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index's next major test will come if volatility remains elevated through the end of the second quarter, when many institutional portfolios rebalance.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.