by Dr. Chris Kacher
**Semiconductors Slammed as Memory Giants Shift Production Plans**
Semiconductor stocks took a sharp hit on Tuesday. The PHLX Semiconductor Index dropped more than 7 percent in a single session. Memory names led the decline.
### Primary Factor: Tax on unrealized cap gains
The trigger came from South Korea. The dominant driver was a sudden policy scare in South Korea. Reports emerged that Korean lawmakers and civic groups are actively discussing **imposing taxes on unrealized capital gains** for stocks (and potentially real estate).
This would mean investors could face tax bills on paper profits even if they have not sold their shares. The proposal spooked the market because South Korea’s stock market has become one of the top 6 largest in the world after a massive rally in 2025–2026, driven heavily by retail investors who are often leveraged.
The Kospi index plunged nearly **10%** — one of its worst single-day drops in years — with Samsung and SK Hynix each falling over **12%**. The panic in the local market spilled directly into global semiconductor names.
### Secondary Factor: Memory Production Shifts
Adding to the pressure were reports that:
- SK Hynix is slowing its ramp of next-generation HBM4 and shifting some capacity toward regular DRAM (where margins are currently very attractive due to tight supply).
- Samsung is accelerating its launch of HBM4 and HBM4E.
Investors interpreted these moves as possible early signs that the extreme AI memory shortage could ease sooner than expected, threatening the high pricing and margins the industry has enjoyed.
### Market Impact
- Pure memory plays (MU, SNDK) were especially weak.
- Broader names (NVDA, TSM, AMD, AVGO, etc.) also fell but generally less severely.
- After a parabolic run, any combination of policy risk + supply narrative shift triggers fast profit-taking.
The Korean unrealized gains tax discussion was the macro panic button that turned a normal sector rotation into a much larger rout. While AI memory demand remains fundamentally strong (HBM largely sold out for 2026), markets are highly sensitive right now to any policy or supply signals.
This reaction fits the pattern we have seen throughout the AI boom. Any hint that supply might catch up to demand after months of parabolic gains causes quick profit-taking and rotation out of the hottest names.
Fundamentals for AI memory remain strong overall. HBM is still largely sold out for the rest of 2026, and demand keeps rising. Yet the market hates uncertainty.
The selloff looks like classic digestion in a concentrated sector rather than the start of a deeper downturn. Still, it shows how sensitive these stocks remain to any shift in the supply narrative.
### Future impact
But despite the mounting selling pressure so far in June, the MU monster earnings beat reinforced the AI memory boom story.
**Summary of Micron’s (MU) fiscal Q3 2026 earnings**:
### Key Results (Massive Beat)
- **Revenue**: **$41.46 billion**
→ Beat estimates of ~$35.6 billion
→ Up ~346% YoY (one of the biggest revenue jumps in company history)
- **Adjusted EPS**: **$25.11**
→ Beat estimates of ~$20.60
→ Up over 1,200% YoY
- **Gross Margin**: Record levels (reported adjusted gross margin around **86%** in guidance commentary)
### Q4 Guidance (Also Very Strong)
- Revenue: **~$50 billion** (well above consensus ~$42.9 billion)
- Adjusted EPS: **~$31.00** (above expectations of ~$25.50)
- Adjusted Gross Margin: **~86%**
### Main Takeaways
- **HBM and AI memory** drove the blowout quarter. Demand continues to outpace supply, with HBM sold out for the rest of 2026.
- Pricing power remains extremely strong, especially in high-bandwidth memory.
- The company continues to see a multi-year AI memory supercycle with tight supply into 2027.
But in this rollercoaster market, while the PCE numbers were in line with expectations, the 3.4% core reading is uncomfortably sticky. It reinforces the narrative that inflation is not cooling fast enough, especially with oil prices still elevated from recent geopolitical tensions. This reminds traders that the Fed may stay hawkish longer (or even hike rates), which is weighing on sentiment thus today's reversal from the gap higher at the open.