AI investors may pivot to hyperscalers from chipmakers, Morgan Stanley says


FILE PHOTO: AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters and robot hand miniature in this illustration taken, June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

July 6 (Reuters) - Morgan Stanley ⁠said the recent weakness in U.S. semiconductor stocks is ⁠a sign that the market gains are broadening, with investors ‌likely to turn toward AI "hyperscalers" as well as consumer discretionary, transport and biotechnology shares.

In a note dated Monday, the brokerage said hyperscalers — an industry term for ​tech companies that are spending big on ⁠data centers — could benefit ⁠from a rotation away from semiconductor stocks as the AI cycle shifts.

Although ⁠the ‌likes of Alphabet and Amazon have committed billions to scale up their AI infrastructure, skyrocketing the share prices ⁠of semiconductor companies, clear evidence that AI products ​can generate returns ‌that justify the spending is yet to be seen.

But Morgan ⁠Stanley said ​there could be "more capex discipline in the near-term" and that the hyperscaler stocks have already gone through their period of underperformance.

Alphabet, Amazon, Meta ⁠Platforms and others saw heavy selling in ​June, while the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index climbed 11% last month.

But the chip index has fallen over 11% in the last two weeks, ⁠while the Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF — a proxy to track the seven biggest Wall Street tech companies — has recovered some lost ground.

Morgan Stanley also said that the markets paring back expectations of ​rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve, ⁠along with a fall in crude oil prices, is also driving the ​rotation out of the red-hot chips ‌trade.

Consumer discretionary goods, transports and biotechnology-related ​stocks could benefit from the rotation, according to the brokerage.

(Reporting by Shashwat Chauhan in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed)

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