Some of the shine is wearing off shares of Nvidia and other U.S. semi-conductor companies after a stunning 2023 rally, as investors weigh steep valuations, rising Treasury yields and signs of industry unease.
Chip stocks soared to start the year, with the Philadelphia SE Semi-conductor index rising over 50 per cent through July. No stock symbolized the chip industry’s success more than Nvidia (NVDA-Q), whose shares tripled in 2023 as the company’s market value topped US$1-trillion, driven by excitement over the central role of the company’s products in artificial intelligence applications.
But performance for the group has stalled. The SOX semi-conductor index is off over 7 per cent this month, versus a 2.3-per-cent drop for the broad S&P 500, while shares of Nvidia – a driver of the broader market’s rally this year – have declined more than 14 per cent in September.
“They have definitely lost some momentum,” said King Lip, chief investment strategist at Baker Avenue Wealth Management. “Many of these chip names got that AI boost. Some of that fervour has kind of simmered down.”
As the stocks rose this year, so did valuations. At the end of July, the 21-stock S&P 500 semi-conductors and semi-conductors equipment industry group was trading at 28.5 times forward 12-month earnings estimates, compared to its 10-year average P/E of 16.5 times, according to LSEG Datastream.
Even with this month’s declines, the group still trades at a forward P/E of 23.5 times.
“Coming out of the pandemic and with this rise in popularity and race for AI-related innovation, that created a tailwind for semi-conductor stocks,” said Kevin Mahn, president and chief investment officer at Hennion & Walsh Asset Management.
With “some of the names that really have catapulted to the top, now you are starting to question valuations,” Mr. Mahn said.
Valuations are coming under further pressure from the rise in Treasury yields. Higher yields on Treasuries – which are seen as virtually risk free – offer investment competition to equities, viewed as a riskier asset class.
Yields jumped on Wednesday, with two-year yields hitting 17-year highs, after the Federal Reserve signaled a policy of interest rates staying higher for longer.
Nvidia’s recent weakness has come even after it far exceeded expectations with its revenue forecast when it reported quarterly results in late August. Other big semi-conductor stock decliners in September include Lam Research (LRCX-Q) down 12 per cent, and Applied Materials (AMAT-Q) and KLA Corp (KLAC-Q), both off about 10 per cent.
Interest in the AI sector from retail investors is also waning, according to VandaTrack, which tracks retail activity.
Industry-specific issues are weighing on the group as well, investors said, including ongoing tensions between the United States and China over semi-conductors. Washington is considering restrictions on sales of AI microchips, following export controls last year to cut China off from certain semi-conductor chips made anywhere in the world with U.S. equipment.
In another blow, Reuters reported on Friday that Taiwan’s TSMC (TSM-N) has told its major suppliers to delay the delivery of high-end chipmaking equipment, as the world’s top contract chipmaker grows increasingly nervous about customer demand. Shares of several TSMC suppliers fell after the report.
Meanwhile, the early buzz following last week’s initial public offering of Arm Holdings has worn off, with shares of the chip designer down for a fifth straight day.
Of course, many chip stocks are sitting on substantial gains for the year and this month may only be a temporary setback.
Investors should look for dividend-paying chip companies with strong balance sheets trading at reasonable valuations, said Mr. Mahn, whose firm holds shares of Analog Devices and Broadcom.
“I do believe there are opportunities in semi-conductor stocks going forward,” Mr. Mahn said.
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