Is A Semiconductor Sector Crash Imminent?

Semiconductors defended critical $600 support, signaling near-term strength ahead of earnings season.

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Source: DepositPhotos

Will the semiconductor sector crash and take the entire stock market down with it? The short answer is not yet. While the semiconductor space has been heavily overbought, the froth has moderated slightly since the start of July.

A brief short position into the recent semiconductor sell-off proved profitable, but trading around $600 per share on the SMH requires extreme caution. This level acts as a massive psychological support line. When a major support level breaks temporarily and instantly snaps back, it behaves like a balloon pushed underwater—it pops right back up like a cork. Because SMH gapped up and closed back above $600, we raised capital, trimmed our short exposure at the highs, and locked in gains on the pullback. The near-term path of least resistance remains to the upside, making a smaller, more defensive short footprint the smart play right now.

The SK Hynix IPO Cushion and Macro Headwinds

A primary catalyst keeping a bid under semiconductors is the blockbuster SK Hynix U.S. listing. Wall Street’s largest brokerages were heavily incentivized to ensure this massive debut succeeded, bidding the stock up well above its offer price. Because a stable semiconductor tape was essential for the deal’s success, the broader sector rallied right along with it.

Markets are also entering “silly season”—the corporate earnings cycle. Bank earnings kick off first, followed by the hyperscalers and major semiconductor firms the week after. This sequence should keep a floor under tech valuations for the next couple of weeks. However, macro traders must keep an eye on the Bank of Korea’s central bank meeting this coming Thursday. With an interest rate hike anticipated, a subsequent drop in South Korean equities could trigger direct follow-through in domestic markets by Friday’s open.

Four Setups for the Week Ahead

Every Saturday, automated TrendSpider scans filter the Nasdaq 100 to isolate the cleanest setups. This week, four distinct names stand out across the board:

  • Starbucks (SBUX): Starbucks is breaking out of a prolonged, multi-month consolidation window. The monthly chart shows the stock trading cleanly above a key volume shelf, having broken out through stubborn overhead resistance. The weekly chart reveals a tight Bollinger Band squeeze—where the bands are trading inside the Keltner channels—signaling an immense amount of coiled energy ready to step higher.

  • AMD: This stock serves as an excellent technical hedge against a broader semiconductor short. AMD is flagging out and booked a solid breakout. The daily chart features a powerful Bollinger Band squeeze. While the technology trade remains highly crowded on the Commitment of Traders (COT) report, the current market structure favors a continuation move. Entering this requires discipline; wait for a clean retest of the breakout point before executing.

  • Cadence Design Systems (CDNS): Trading at all-time highs, CDNS has formed a textbook bull flag setup and broken upward. Like AMD, the daily chart displays a Bollinger Band squeeze packed with energy. The strategy here relies on a core rule: never chase stocks. Let the price come to your specific entry target to ensure proper risk management from the start.

  • Exelon (EXC): Exelon presents a weekly Bollinger Band squeeze, but it requires patience. The shares failed to hold their volume shelf support during last week’s drop. While it found minor redemption ahead of the weekend and retains long-term upside potential, it needs to consolidate further and recapture key support levels before triggering an entry.

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