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Why are Intel, AMD, ARM stocks selling off today?

Why are Intel, AMD, ARM stocks selling off today?
Wajeeh Khan
29 Jun 2026, 21:22 PM

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Buy INTC (Intel)

Cantor Fitzgerald calls for a dip-buy in Intel, targeting $150 by year-end. The selloff is being driven more by positioning and macro caution than by a clear Intel-specific demand collapse. If the market overreacts to sector-wide memory/guidance fears, INTC should rebound as the least “pure-play” AI infrastructure name gets re-rated.

Key Risk: Intel’s own fundamentals deteriorate (guidance, margins, or execution) and the stock keeps falling even after rebalancing pressure fades.

Sell SMH (VanEck Semiconductor ETF)

Quarter-end and pension rebalancing are forcing passive trims into AI/semis, with an estimated ~$30B outflow hitting the group hardest. With no fresh positive catalyst and “sell-the-news” spillover from Micron, the tape stays heavy. Short SMH to monetize continued momentum weakness across INTC/AMD/ARM.

Key Risk: A sudden, broad risk-on rally that reverses passive outflows and lifts the whole semiconductor complex.

  • Pension fund rebalancing is hitting Intel, AMD, and ARM shares on Jun. 29.
  • These chips stocks still haven't recovered from Micron's earnings pressure.
  • INTC, AMD, and ARM stocks remain blockbuster investments for 2026.

Chip stocks including Intel INTC, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Arm Holdings (ARM) opened in the red this morning mostly due to technical quarter-end positioning.  

Amidst a lack of fresh positive catalysts, lingering earnings pressure and macroeconomic caution are also adding to the weakness in these semiconductor names on Jun. 29.

That said, INTC, AMD, and ARM remain a lucrative investments for 2026, with each having more than doubled since the start of this year.

Pension fund rebalancing is hitting Intel, AMD, and Arm

As the final trading days of June and the second quarter wrap up, massive programmatic selling is hitting the tape.

Institutional managers and US pension funds are undergoing mandatory quarter-end rebalancing.

Because semiconductor and AI infrastructure stocks like AMD, INTC and ARM have booked huge year-to-date gains, fund managers are forced to passively trim these winning, high-multiple tech names to buy lagging asset classes.

According to Wall Street experts, this rebalancing is driving an estimated $30 billion in passive outflows hitting artificial intelligence chip stocks disproportionately.

Follow-through from Micron earnings

The semiconductor sector is still recovering from post-Micron earnings pressure.

While underlying AI demand remains robust, the broader market interpreted the forward-looking guidance and current memory market constraints with extreme caution.

Why? Because demand outpacing supply is fabulous for MU, but for the likes of Intel, AMD, and ARM, it signals supply constraints that may significantly hit their own financial performance.

Micron’s earnings, therefore, triggered a “sell-the-news” event that pulled down the entire VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) on Jun. 26.

That negative momentum is spilling into Monday’s session – adding to pressure on processing and architecture peers (AMD, Intel, ARM) at the time of writing.

Why else are Intel, AMD, Arm slipping today?

INTC, ARM, and AMD are under pressure this morning also because institutional managers are aggressively pulling capital out of chip stocks ahead of a key macroeconomic calendar week.

Investors are also staying cautious before two major events.

The first is a policy speech by new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, which has raised expectations of a late-2026 rate hike.

The second is the June nonfarm payrolls report, prompting a "sell first, ask questions later" approach across the market.

On the flip side, investors should also note that Cantor Fitzgerald analysts recommended buying the dip in both Intel and AMD shares in a research note today.

The investment firm sees INTC stock hitting $150 by year-end – while its upwardly revised price target for AMD stock now sits at $700, indicating potential upside of a little under 35% in the Santa Clara-headquartered chip manufacturer over the next 12 months.