Key Takeaways:
- SOX fell 15.9% to 11,900 after hitting its 13,998 upside target on June 3
- Analysts expect a corrective fourth wave pullback toward 10,000
- A fifth-wave rally to 15,000 is expected after the correction completes
Key Takeaways:
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index surged to its 14,000 target before reversing sharply, with analysts calling for a pullback to 10,000 before the next leg higher.
The SOX fell 15.9% to around 11,900 in four sessions after hitting its 13,998 upside target on June 3, completing a fifth-wave advance that began from 9,523.
"The index reached the ideal target zone for the red third wave, and now a corrective fourth wave is underway," said Dr. Ter Schure, founder of Intelligent Investing, which provides detailed daily updates on US markets, metals and cryptocurrencies.
The decline erased two weeks of gains in four days. The index had rallied from 9,523 to 13,998, exceeding the 161.8% Fibonacci extension level at 13,336 by 662 points. Analysts now expect the correction to find support around 10,185 — the 100% retracement level plus the same 662-point buffer — within a target zone of 10,390 to 11,490. After the fourth wave completes, a fifth-wave rally toward 15,000 plus or minus 1,000 is expected, according to the Elliott Wave analysis.
The selloff comes after an extraordinary run for the semiconductor sector. Chip industry revenue reached $298.5 billion in the first quarter of 2026, up 25% from the prior quarter, according to industry data. The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) is up 89% year to date, driven by artificial intelligence demand and data-center buildouts. Large cloud providers have been spending heavily on AI infrastructure, lifting the entire semiconductor value chain from central processors and graphics processors to power management chips, memory and manufacturing equipment. IDC's April forecast predicted the semiconductor market will exceed $1 trillion in revenue by the end of this year.
Why the Correction Matters for Broader Markets
Semiconductors serve as a leading indicator for the technology sector and the broader equity market. A pullback from 14,000 to 10,000 in the SOX — a decline of roughly 29% from peak to trough — could trigger rotation out of tech names into defensive sectors, pressuring the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500. The corrective wave is expected to subdivide into three smaller waves, with the index currently in the second of those sub-waves. Unless the fourth wave becomes more complex, the pullback should find support in the 10,390-to-11,490 zone before the next leg higher.
The semiconductor sector's trajectory carries high stakes for investors. While AI-driven demand has powered the chip industry to record revenue, the technical setup now points to a multi-week correction. Investors should look past the current hype and ensure semiconductor exposure fits within a well-diversified portfolio held for the long term, as the sector remains prone to sharp reversals after extended rallies.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.