The $3.2 Trillion Chip Rotation That Left the S&P 500 Stuck
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite have been trapped in a stagnant rotation between the Magnificent Seven and chip stocks outside Nvidia. Over the past months, the Magnificent Seven have added approximately $1.5 trillion in market value, while Nvidia-excluded chip stocks have lost nearly $1.7 trillion. This counter-movement has largely canceled each other out at the index level, keeping the S&P 500 oscillating within a resilience range since early May. The Nasdaq Composite has mirrored this behavior, though the Dow Jones has barely moved in July despite Apple, Goldman Sachs, and Chevron breaking out. This rotation extends beyond megacaps, with 44 out of 51 software stocks gaining an average of 6%, while only a handful of chip stocks have risen, with a median decline of nearly 20%. IBM's historic drop highlighted corporate tech budget pressures, though software has outperformed chips. Memory stocks, including Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix, have entered a bear market phase. Semiconductor ETFs now trade over $40 billion daily, up from $9 billion a year ago, and semiconductors now represent nearly 18% of the S&P 500. This dynamic will be tested by Big Tech earnings, where the winners must justify their gains while losers face the risk of further decline.
This chip rotation could signal a structural shift in markets. The Magnificent Seven's strength aligns with rising tech dependency, but the semiconductor sector's excessive liquidity flows may expose vulnerable positions. If software stocks fail to meet earnings expectations, the chip sector could face further pressure.