Chipmakers Bounce Back, Yet Analysts Remain Divided On Sector's Outlook   

 | Aug 12, 2022 18:01

  • Nvidia and Micron warn of a weakening sales environment
  • The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, the industry benchmark, is up more than 19% during the past month
  • Some investors see value in the beaten-down sector after a drastic correction
  • Once regarded as one of the most resilient sectors of the digital economy, chipmakers appear to be at a crossroads. After two years of astronomical demand, the industry's leading companies have begun to warn that demand for their products may be declining. 

    NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA), the largest U.S.-based chipmaker by market value, said last week that its second-quarter sales would fall well short of its previous forecast. The Santa Clara, California-based company expects revenue of $6.7 billion for the quarter ended July 31, some 17% below the $8.1 billion it had forecast in May, amid a 33% drop in gaming revenue.

    Following that announcement, Micron Technology Inc (NASDAQ:MU), another leading U.S. maker of memory chips, also warned investors that revenue wouldn't meet projections. There will be "significant sequential declines in revenue and margins," the company stated in a regulatory filing on Aug.9. 

    The warning from NVDA and MU came after disappointing results from Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD)—a trend that indicates that the slowdown is widespread.

    However, despite signs of a broad-based demand deterioration, these producers' share prices have been on the rise since last month. The industry's benchmark, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, has increased more than 19% over the past 30 days.