The $137 billion intraday wipeout in memory stocks on July 6 marks the sharpest single-day reversal for the AI hardware trade since the 2022 bear market, raising questions about whether a supply glut is forming before demand has fully materialized.
A $137 billion intraday sell-off in memory and semiconductor equities on July 6 erased months of AI-fueled gains, as investors confronted the prospect that an AI hardware supply glut could compress margins across the sector.
"The market is pricing in a scenario where every hyperscaler builds out capacity simultaneously, and that creates a classic oversupply risk," said Rachel Kim, semiconductor supply chain analyst at Edgen. "Memory makers doubled wafer starts on HBM (high-bandwidth memory) lines in the past 18 months, and demand visibility beyond the current quarter is thinning."
The sell-off swept across memory-heavy names. Samsung Electronics, the world's largest memory chipmaker by revenue, saw its shares rebound later in the session on rumors of an AI hardware collaboration with Anthropic, but the intraday damage underscored the fragility of the rally. Lumentum Holdings, an optical component supplier critical to AI data center interconnects, has already pulled back 33 percent from its highs in a four-wave selloff, according to market data. The broader Philadelphia Semiconductor Index fell sharply, with volume surging well above the 20-day average as retail and institutional traders rushed to exit.
The question for investors is whether this is a healthy reset in an overextended rally or the beginning of a structural correction. Memory makers including Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron Technology have collectively committed more than $150 billion in capital expenditure through 2028, much of it tied to HBM3E and next-generation DRAM production for AI accelerators. If hyperscaler demand growth slows — or if NVIDIA and AMD shift to alternative memory architectures — those investments could face a margin compression cycle reminiscent of the 2023 memory downturn.
The sell-off's timing is notable. It comes just weeks after South Korea announced a sweeping investment plan to bolster its domestic semiconductor ecosystem, a move that may exacerbate the oversupply dynamic. Infineon Technologies, meanwhile, completed its new fab ahead of schedule, adding further supply-side pressure to the power management chip segment that supports AI server infrastructure.
At the heart of the dislocation is HBM, the high-bandwidth memory that sits alongside NVIDIA's and AMD's AI accelerators. HBM supply was severely constrained through 2024 and 2025, giving memory makers extraordinary pricing power. SK Hynix, which dominates the HBM market with an estimated 50 percent share, reported record operating margins in its most recent quarter. But as Samsung and Micron ramp their own HBM3E production, the pricing dynamic is shifting. Industry checks suggest HBM contract prices have begun to stabilize after six consecutive quarters of increases, a signal that supply is catching up to demand.
The optical networking segment tells a similar story. Lumentum's 33 percent decline from its peak reflects growing uncertainty around the adoption timeline for 1.6T optical transceivers and co-packaged optics, technologies that data center operators need to scale AI cluster interconnects. If those deployments slip, the entire supply chain — from memory to networking to power management — faces a demand hole.
For investors, the sell-off creates a valuation disconnect worth watching. The PHLX Semiconductor Index trades at roughly 22 times forward earnings, down from 28 times at its peak in early 2026 but still above its five-year average of 18 times. Samsung shares, which fell 4 percent intraday before recovering, now trade at a discount to SK Hynix on an enterprise value-to-sales basis, reflecting the market's uncertainty about its HBM ramp timeline. If the supply glut narrative proves overblown — and hyperscaler capital expenditure continues to grow at 30 percent-plus annually — the sell-off may present an entry point. But if demand softens even modestly, the $137 billion in erased market value could be just the first installment.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.