Plunge in Asia’s AI shares sparks doubts over rally


Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co now accounts for over 40% of the Taiex, triple its share a decade ago. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo

SINGAPORE: The sudden slump in Asia’s technology shares last week has jolted investors, serving as a stark reminder that the world-beating rally in artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductor stocks may be nearing a short-term crest.

The region’s sharpest decline since April – triggered by a tech-led selloff on Wall Street – has refocused attention on cracks beneath the surface: the rally’s narrow breadth, heavy reliance on retail traders, and growing uncertainty around the timing of Federal Reserve (Fed) interest-rate cuts.

Last week’s “sell-off is a reminder that Asia’s market structure is just more vulnerable,” said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo Markets in Singapore.

“Further corrections will come. The trigger, in my opinion, was extended valuations and we have not corrected that.

“So, the Asia chip market is likely to be volatile.”

Asia’s tech sector has outpaced its US counterpart this year, fuelled by cheaper valuations and the excitement sparked by China’s AI breakthroughs, particularly that of DeepSeek.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index has climbed 24% in 2025 – on track to outperform the S&P 500 by the widest margin in 16 years.

But its meteoric rise has also stirred concern about overheating.

South Korea’s stock exchange has even warned about the dangers posed by the more than 200% surge in SK Hynix Inc shares this year.

Those lofty gains helped set the stage for last week’s reversal.

The MSCI Asia technology gauge slid as much as 4.2% last Wednesday, its biggest intraday fall since April’s US tariff shock.

South Korea’s Kospi plunged up to 6.2%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 tumbled as much as 4.7%.

Key Nvidia Corp suppliers – including SK Hynix and Advantest Corp – were among the hardest hit, each losing roughly 10%.

Concentration RisksAnalysts said Asia’s outsized losses reflected another structural issue: the extreme concentration of tech giants in regional benchmarks.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co now accounts for over 40% of the Taiex, triple its share a decade ago.

In South Korea, Samsung Electronics Co and SK Hynix together make up about 30% of the Kospi.

Japan is no exception: the top five stocks in the Nikkei 225 account for about 38% of total weighting.

“If anything goes wrong with the AI or semiconductor boom, the Nikkei will plunge immediately,” said Takehiko Masuzawa, head of equity trading at Phillip Securities Japan in Tokyo.

“I do think we’ll continue to see more corrections and heightened volatility going forward.”

The heavy involvement of retail investors in the current rally has also amplified swings, analysts say.

“With foreign investors still on the sidelines, higher retail and domestic participation is driving greater volatility and sector rotation across Asian markets,” said Peter Kim, managing director at KB Securities Co in Seoul.

“Less liquidity and institutional participation, and the high beta features of Asian stocks are especially evident in AI themes.”

Meanwhile, a strengthening US dollar has intensified pressure on Asian chipmakers, luring funds back to American assets.

“Traders are also scaling back bets on imminent Fed rate cuts, removing a key tailwind for global equities.

“To be sure, not everyone viewed last week’s pullback as a reason for alarm.

“What we saw was taking profit, nothing more, nothing less,” said Shawn Oh, an equity trader at NH Investment & Securities Co in Seoul.

“Psychology is playing a bigger role than fundamentals.

“Many people probably thought there would be a correction at least once too.”

Even after the rout, valuations in Asia’s chip sector remain comparatively appealing: Bloomberg’s regional semiconductor gauge trades at around 18 times forward earnings, well below the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index’s 28 times.

For others, the Asian tech sell-off – following the warnings from Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Morgan Stanley chief executives about the likelihood of a global stock pullback – was just another reason to turn more cautious. — Bloomberg

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