The Wall Street Times

Semiconductor Stocks Pull Back as Investors Take Profits After 80% First-Half Surge

Semiconductor Stocks Pull Back After 80% First-Half Surge
Photo Credit: Unsplash.com

Semiconductor stocks fell on July 1, 2026, as investors took profits following a first half in which chip names climbed more than 80%. The rotation pulled the Nasdaq Composite down 0.66% to 26,040.03, with Micron sliding more than 10% even as it held onto a year-to-date gain above 260%.

Key Takeaways

  • Semiconductor stocks declined on July 1, 2026, as investors rotated out of the group after a first-half surge exceeding 80%.
  • The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.66% to close at 26,040.03, with Micron dropping more than 10% despite remaining up over 260% year-to-date.
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average reached a record intraday high of 52,742.66 before closing nearly flat at 52,305.24.
  • Meta Platforms rose close to 9% after announcing a cloud business to sell excess computing power, limiting the broader technology decline.

What Drove the Semiconductor Sell-Off?

The pullback in semiconductor stocks reflected profit-taking rather than a shift in fundamentals. After the group surged more than 80% in the first half of 2026, investors moved to lock in gains at the start of the third quarter, sending chip names lower across the board. Micron Technology led the decline with a drop of more than 10%, though the stock remained up over 260% for the year, illustrating the scale of the run that preceded the sell-off.

The retreat concentrated in the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite, which fell 0.66% to 26,040.03. The move followed a first half in which the Nasdaq climbed 12.8%, part of a broad advance that gave major indexes their strongest quarterly performance since 2020. The semiconductor trade had been a central driver of that rally, which made the group a natural target once quarter-end positioning gave way to the new period.

How Did the Major Indexes Perform?

The three major averages diverged on July 1, 2026, as the rotation played out. The Dow Jones Industrial Average touched a record intraday high of 52,742.66 before cooling to close at 52,305.24, a decline of 13.96 points, or 0.03%. The pullback in the Dow tracked a nearly 7% drop in Caterpillar, an industrial name that had benefited from artificial intelligence demand. The broad-market S&P 500 fell 0.22% to end at 7,483.23.

The single-day moves stood against a first half of gains across the market. The Dow rose 8.9% in the first six months of 2026, its strongest first-half performance since 2021, while the S&P 500 advanced 9.6%. The small-cap Russell 2000 climbed nearly 22% over the same period. The table below summarizes the first-half index performance heading into the July 1 session.

Index First-Half 2026 Gain
Dow Jones Industrial Average +8.9%
S&P 500 +9.6%
Nasdaq Composite +12.8%
Russell 2000 +22%

 Which Stocks Cushioned the Technology Decline?

Not all technology names participated in the sell-off. Meta Platforms rose close to 9% after announcing it would launch a cloud business and sell excess computing power, a move that could add a new revenue stream and drew investor interest. The gain in Meta Platforms helped offset weakness among the semiconductor group and stemmed a steeper decline in the Nasdaq Composite.

Other large-capitalization technology stocks also advanced. Microsoft rose 3% and Apple gained nearly 2%, providing additional support to the index. The split between these gainers and the falling chip names pointed to a market rotating within the technology sector rather than exiting it wholesale, a dynamic that shaped the session’s mixed close.

What Does the Rotation Signal for Market Breadth?

The July 1 session raised a question that has followed the 2026 rally: whether market strength can broaden beyond the semiconductor trade. The first-half advance leaned heavily on chip stocks, and their pullback tested whether other sectors and names could absorb leadership. On the day, 65.7% of US-listed issues advanced even as the Nasdaq Composite fell, a sign that buying interest extended beyond the largest technology names.

Market commentators have flagged the durability of the move as the central issue for the weeks ahead. The concern centers on whether gains driven by a narrow set of stocks can give way to wider participation, which analysts view as a marker of a healthier advance. The first half’s concentration in semiconductors leaves the market sensitive to swings in that single group, making the breadth of any recovery a focus for investors entering the third quarter.

Semiconductor stocks gave back a portion of their outsized first-half gains on July 1, 2026, in a rotation that tested whether the 2026 rally can broaden beyond the chip trade that has powered it.

FAQs

Why did semiconductor stocks fall on July 1, 2026? Investors took profits after semiconductor stocks surged more than 80% in the first half of 2026. The selling reflected quarter-end positioning and profit-taking rather than a change in the sector’s fundamentals.

How much did Micron fall? Micron Technology dropped more than 10% during the session. Despite the decline, the stock remained up over 260% for the year.

Did the Dow set a record on July 1, 2026? The Dow Jones Industrial Average reached a record intraday high of 52,742.66 before closing slightly lower at 52,305.24, a decline of about 0.03%.

Why did Meta Platforms rise? Meta Platforms gained close to 9% after announcing plans to launch a cloud business and sell excess computing power, which investors viewed as a potential new revenue source.

How strong was the first half of 2026 for stocks? The Dow rose 8.9%, its strongest first-half showing since 2021, while the S&P 500 gained 9.6% and the Nasdaq climbed 12.8%. The Russell 2000 advanced nearly 22%.

What does market breadth mean for investors? Market breadth measures how many stocks participate in a move. Broader participation is generally viewed as a sign of a more durable advance than one led by a narrow group of stocks.

Navigating the currents of finance and beyond, where financial insight meets the pulse of the world.

More from The Wall Street Times