Davide Semilia
Retail Investors Just Bought the Most Chips Since 2021. $3.2 billion in a single week. That's how much retail money poured into semiconductor stocks over the past five trading days, the highest inflow since the meme stock era. And if that doesn't make you nervous, it should. Here's what happened. Chip stocks ripped higher through April on AI spending hype, with names like NVDA and AVGO posting moves that made even seasoned traders uncomfortable. Institutional desks started trimming. Hedge funds quietly reduced exposure. And then, right on cue, retail showed up — buying the most aggressive dip-that-wasn't since the post-COVID rally. The pattern is painfully familiar. Big money builds a position over months. The story hits mainstream. Retail floods in at the tail end, confusing momentum for conviction. I've watched this movie before with cannabis stocks, SPACs, and unprofitable tech in 2021. The ending is rarely kind to latecomers. Does this mean the AI chip supercycle is fake? Absolutely not. TSMC is building $65 billion worth of US fabs. Hyperscalers are spending like there's no tomorrow. The demand is real. But real demand and reasonable entry prices are two very different things. When everybody agrees something is a sure thing, the risk-reward has already shifted. NVDA trading at 35x forward earnings with retail positioning at extremes isn't a buy signal — it's a yellow flag. My approach right now: I own chip exposure but I'm not adding here. If you missed the April rally, chasing it in May with maximum crowd company is exactly how portfolios get hurt. Patience pays more than FOMO ever will. $NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) $AMD (Advanced Micro Devices Inc) $AVGO (Broadcom Inc) $TSMC $SMH (VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF) $INTC (Intel)
Not investment advice. The author may have financial interests in the mentioned instruments.
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