Home Community Insights AI Trade Roars Back Across Asia as Chip Stocks Rally, but IPO Wave Raises Questions About Investor Appetite

AI Trade Roars Back Across Asia as Chip Stocks Rally, but IPO Wave Raises Questions About Investor Appetite

AI Trade Roars Back Across Asia as Chip Stocks Rally, but IPO Wave Raises Questions About Investor Appetite

Artificial intelligence-linked technology stocks staged a strong rebound across Asia on Tuesday, mirroring gains on Wall Street as investors returned to semiconductor and AI infrastructure plays after a sharp bout of profit-taking that rattled global technology markets last week.

The rally was led by South Korean chipmakers, underscoring continued investor conviction that demand for AI computing power remains robust even as concerns grow about valuations, capital spending, and an unprecedented wave of upcoming technology listings.

Shares of SK Hynix jumped 6.44%, while Samsung Electronics gained 3.38%. Smaller AI-linked names also benefited, with Seoul Semiconductor surging more than 12%.

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Japan’s semiconductor ecosystem also participated in the recovery. Tokyo Electron rose 5.65%, Advantest advanced 1.51%, and Renesas Electronics climbed 2.54%.

The gains followed a strong session in the United States, where semiconductor stocks helped lift the broader market. The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.86% while the S&P 500 gained 0.3%, recovering part of last week’s losses as investors reassessed the outlook for AI-related spending.

While chipmakers and infrastructure providers attracted fresh buying, shares of SoftBank Group fell another 2%, extending recent declines after a spectacular run driven by enthusiasm surrounding artificial intelligence investments.

AI spending remains the market’s dominant narrative. Demand for advanced memory chips, graphics processors, networking equipment, and data-center infrastructure continues to accelerate as major technology companies race to expand computing capacity.

Recent comments from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang that memory shortages could persist for years have bolstered the view that supply remains tight across critical AI components. That outlook has particularly benefited companies such as SK Hynix, which has emerged as a major supplier of high-bandwidth memory chips used in advanced AI systems.

The rally also comes amid expectations that AI infrastructure spending by hyperscale cloud providers, startups, and governments could continue expanding well into the next decade.

Despite Tuesday’s recovery, investors remain cautious as markets approach one of the most consequential IPO events in recent history. SpaceX is expected to price its highly anticipated public offering this week, with trading scheduled to begin shortly afterward.

The offering has become a focal point for global equity markets because of its sheer scale and its symbolic importance to the AI investment boom.

The company’s listing is expected to test whether public markets can absorb a surge of capital-intensive AI offerings without undermining valuations across the broader technology sector.

Investor attention is also shifting toward what could become the largest fundraising cycle in technology history. OpenAI recently confirmed it had confidentially filed for an initial public offering, following a similar move by Anthropic.

Together with SpaceX, the three companies represent trillions of dollars in potential market value and could collectively seek hundreds of billions of dollars from investors over the coming years.

That prospect is creating both excitement and concern. First, the filings signal confidence that AI adoption will continue expanding rapidly across industries, including software development, finance, healthcare, legal services, and enterprise automation. Secondly, some market participants worry that the concentration of fundraising could begin to drain liquidity from other sectors.

Andrew Jackson of ORTUS Advisors noted that OpenAI’s filing could tighten capital availability, particularly if investors increasingly direct funds toward a handful of dominant AI companies at the expense of smaller growth firms.

However, the valuation debate remains unresolved.

The rebound in Asian technology stocks suggests investors are not yet ready to abandon the AI trade. However, the market remains divided over whether current valuations accurately reflect future earnings potential.

The debate has intensified following warnings from investors such as Michael Burry and Steve Eisman, who have questioned whether the enormous sums being invested in AI infrastructure will ultimately generate sufficient returns.

At the same time, executives, including Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon, argue that abundant liquidity, strong corporate demand, and accelerating AI adoption suggest the cycle may still be in its relatively early stages.

For now, the market appears to be siding with growth. Tuesday’s rally across Asian semiconductor stocks indicates investors continue to view chipmakers as some of the clearest beneficiaries of the AI boom.

The more difficult test may come later when SpaceX begins trading.

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