Wall Street Ends Week Lower as Chip Selloff Broadens

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Wall Street extended its decline Friday as a pullback on stocks associated with the AI boom, which has driven many of the gains so far this year, morphed into a larger risk-off sentiment.

Semiconductor shares, which have led the broader market's move in recent sessions, initially ‌led the selloff, which broadened as the session progressed.

All three major U.S. stock indexes closed lower on ​the day and posted weekly losses.

SEMICONDUCTOR INDEX UP 65%

The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index logged its steepest weekly loss in over a year, and has tumbled nearly 18% so far in July.

Even so, the index ⁠remains up about 65% year-to-date, compared with the S&P 500's nearly 9% gain over the same timeframe.

Some investors ​in the artificial intelligence space have begun positioning for a slowdown in the nearly trillion-dollar spending boom, with some ⁠active managers already scaling back their exposure, according to a Reuters analysis.

"It's like the market has chip fatigue," said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group in Omaha, Nebraska.

"Chip stocks are down three of the last four weeks, and it's the same worries, the same concerns; ‌those stocks got way ahead of themselves, and now they're coming back to Earth," Detrick said.

According to preliminary data, ​the S&P 500 lost ‌75.99 points, or 1.01%, to end at 7,457.78 points, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 370.83 points, or 1.40%, to 25,511.12. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 394.01 points, or 0.75%, ‌to 52,158.96.

Among the major sectors of the S&P 500, energy stocks were the biggest gainers, benefiting from spiking crude prices amid signs of escalating hostilities in the Iran war.

Q2 EARNINGS UPBEAT

Second-quarter earnings season is still in its early ‌days, with 49 of the companies in ⁠the S&P 500 having reported. Of those, 90% have delivered better-than-expected results, according to LSEG.

Analysts now see year-on-year S&P 500 earnings growth of 26.0%, in aggregate, ⁠up from ⁠the 19.2% expectations as of April 1, per LSEG.

"It's early in earnings season, but we're off to a tremendous start," Detrick added. "Over the next several weeks, we're going ‌to get a lot more sectors and industries reporting. But so far, the banks have really started us off on the right foot."

Netflix tumbled after the company's weaker-than-expected earnings forecast, raising doubts about the sustainability of the content growth momentum.

Uber Technologies dropped ‌after the rideshare ​app announced it would acquire Germany's Delivery ‌Hero in a deal worth nearly $15 billion.

Intuitive Surgical shares slid after the medical device maker kept its da Vinci procedure growth forecast unchanged and warned insurance-plan changes may be delaying patient care.

On the economic ​front, consumer sentiment increased to a five-month high in July, but single-family housing starts and building permits dipped, and industrial output increased by a meager 0.1%.

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