News of a strategic alliance between Intel and Apple sparked a massive wave of buying in the semiconductor sector on Friday.
• The chip manufacturing partnership between Intel and Apple acts as a massive vote of confidence
• Profiteers from AI infrastructure such as Micron and AMD are recording enormous share price gains
• The tech giants are soaring
The semiconductor sector enjoyed an impressive rally on the NASDAQ on Friday, driven by a combination of strategic corporate news and stabilizing macroeconomic factors.
Intel and Apple: An alliance with a signaling effect
The main driver of the euphoria was the news of a groundbreaking rapprochement between two tech giants. According to reports, Intel and Apple have reached a tentative agreement under which Intel will manufacture some of the chips for Apple devices in the future. This partnership is particularly notable because Apple relied exclusively on the Taiwanese manufacturer TSMC for years after switching to its own processors. The Intel share reacted with a price jump of 13.96 percent, as investors see this as confirmation of the group’s successful transformation into a leading global contract manufacturer (foundry). Apple, in turn, was able to gain 2.05 percent because the diversification of the supply chain significantly reduces the risk of bottlenecks, especially in the production of future generations of iPhones.
Broad gains across the sector
Other industry heavyweights also got carried away by the positive momentum. AMD recorded an increase of 11.44 percent, while Qualcomm gained 8.17 percent. Micron Technology performed particularly strongly with an increase of 15.49 percent. Here, positive analyst comments and the continued high demand for storage solutions for AI data centers supported the upward movement. Broadcom also gained 4.23 percent, rounding out the overall picture of a sector on the rise.
Macroeconomic tailwinds
The sector rally was flanked by more relaxed signals from the bond market. Weaker U.S. consumer confidence data fueled hopes that the Federal Reserve could have room to cut interest rates later this year despite a robust labor market. Falling government bond yields traditionally act as a catalyst for high-growth technology stocks. In addition, a slight relaxation in oil prices brought a sigh of relief as fears about an escalation in the Middle East and the associated supply chain risks faded into the background for the time being. The combination of technological progress, large strategic orders and a friendlier interest rate environment has given semiconductor stocks one of the strongest trading days of the current year.
Risks in the shadow of euphoria
Despite the current price explosion, there are factors that should warn investors to be cautious. A central point is the implementation risk: Intel now has to prove that Apple can catch up technologically in a stable and profitable way, even in mass production – in the past, the company has struggled with costly delays on several occasions. In addition, the rally in stocks such as Micron and AMD is based almost exclusively on the AI growth story, while the classic business with PCs and smartphones continues to stagnate. If the major cloud providers even slightly reduce their massive investments in AI infrastructure, the sector’s high valuation could quickly come under pressure. Last but not least, geopolitical tensions and export restrictions to China remain a latent risk that could unforeseeably restrict the US chip industry’s sales markets at any time.
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Evaluation under pressure: What counts now
After the dynamic upward movement, the question of the sustainability of valuations comes into greater focus. The market is currently pricing in continued high growth in the AI segment – so there is limited scope for disappointment. The decisive factor will be whether companies stabilize their margins despite high investments and at the same time whether demand from the traditional semiconductor business does not continue to erode. For investors this means: selectivity is becoming increasingly important. While integrated providers with a strong position in infrastructure tend to be more robust, specialized players remain more dependent on the hyperscalers’ willingness to invest. Against this background, short-term setbacks appear less as a trend break than as a necessary correction in a structurally intact but increasingly demanding market environment.
Claudia Stephan, editorial team at finanzen.net
