The Magnificent 7 tech companies lost approximately $2.3 trillion in market value this month as investors scrutinize massive AI infrastructure spending. The CNBC Magnificent 7 Index fell 10% in June, with Microsoft declining 20%, Nvidia dropping 13%, and both Apple and Amazon down around 8%. The value erosion stems from investor concerns over hundreds of billions of dollars these companies are spending on chips and data centers to power AI services, with some investment funded through debt. Market participants are shifting capital toward semiconductor stocks, where the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index gained 6% this month and rallied over 90% this year.
The Magnificent 7 comprises Microsoft, Nvidia, Alphabet, Apple, Meta, Tesla and Amazon. Microsoft experienced the steepest decline at 20% in June, while Nvidia fell approximately 13%. Both Apple and Amazon recorded declines of around 8% during the same period.
These companies are collectively spending hundreds of billions of dollars purchasing chips and constructing data centers to power artificial intelligence services. Part of this investment is being financed through debt instruments.
Investors are awaiting return validation on these investments during the second quarter earnings season, which begins next month. Dan Ives, managing director at Wedbush Securities, stated in a note on Sunday: "We are going through another 'gut check' few weeks ahead for the tech trade as tech investors await a very important 2Q earnings season in July to further validate the AI Revolution buildout."
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which includes Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Micron and ASML, rose approximately 6% this month. The index has rallied more than 90% this year versus a 3.4% decline for the Mag 7.
Chip manufacturers have benefited from spending by large technology firms purchasing semiconductors, creating supply shortages. The supply constraints have generated positive effects across the entire supply chain, from component suppliers to manufacturers.
Memory components face particular supply bottlenecks, with shortages driving prices upward. The Roundhill Memory ETF, which tracks memory stocks including SK Hynix and Samsung, gained 166% this year.
Micron reported blowout earnings last week. HSBC multi-asset strategist Duncan Toms stated in a note on Monday that the results "pour cold water" over skepticism in the AI narrative, "showing hard evidence for an AI backdrop that is alive and healthy."
Tom Lee, head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors, told CNBC's "Morning Call" last week: "The market is trying to understand sort of the new narrative around the Mag 7 because they went from asset-light companies that produced a lot of free cash flow, now to ones that are more balance sheet intensive."
Lee added: "I do think investors are going to start to view that balance sheet as a workforce. The reason they are spending so much money is to replace essentially human endeavors with AI. That balance sheet is going to be deployed and generate returns. So I think over time investors are going to start to view that as a moat ... we are in a transition period of that narrative."
UBS analysts stated in a note on Tuesday that bottlenecks in the AI supply chain show no signs of abating, while the investment bank expects cloud revenue to accelerate at major platforms through the rest of this year. UBS wrote: "These underscore the solid fundamentals of the AI growth story that we believe should remain a key driver of the broader market."
What caused the Mag 7 companies to lose $2.3 trillion in value this month?
Investors are scrutinizing the hundreds of billions of dollars these companies are spending on AI infrastructure, including chips and data centers. Some of this investment is being funded through debt, and market participants are waiting to see returns on these expenditures during the second quarter earnings season beginning next month.
Why are semiconductor stocks performing better than the Mag 7?
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index gained 6% this month and rallied over 90% this year, compared to the Mag 7's 3.4% decline. Chip manufacturers are benefiting from strong demand from large technology firms, creating supply shortages that have driven prices higher across the semiconductor supply chain, particularly in memory components.
Which Mag 7 company experienced the largest decline in June?
Microsoft recorded the steepest decline at 20% in June, followed by Nvidia at approximately 13%, while both Apple and Amazon fell around 8% during the same period.
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