TLDR
- Micron, Intel, and AMD added a combined $2 trillion in market cap in Q2 2026
- Micron led gains with a 240% jump; Intel rose 216%; AMD climbed 186%
- Investors rotated from AI hyperscalers like Nvidia into broader semiconductor plays
- Micron’s gross margin jumped to 84.9%, up from 39% a year earlier
- Market volatility risk is building beneath the surface, with stock dispersion at its highest since 2015
Micron, Intel, and Advanced Micro Devices had one of their best quarters on record between April and June 2026. Together, the three chipmakers added roughly $2 trillion in combined market value.
Micron led the group. Its stock jumped more than 240% in the quarter, adding around $920 billion in market cap. The company makes computer memory, and demand has surged as AI chipmakers buy more of it.
Micron also reported strong financials. Revenue more than quadrupled in its latest quarter, and its gross margin rose sharply to 84.9%, up from 39% a year earlier.
Intel was not far behind. Shares of the CPU maker rose 216%, adding $480 billion in market cap. Intel is building new chip factories in the U.S. and is also seeing renewed demand as more AI workloads move to devices.
Advanced Micro Devices added $615 billion in value after its stock nearly tripled. The company makes both CPUs and graphics processors, though it still trails Nvidia in the GPU market.
Investors Rotate Away from Nvidia and Hyperscalers
Nvidia remains the largest U.S. company by market cap, but its stock only gained 15% in Q2. That is a slower pace compared to the broader chip sector rally.
Analysts say investors shifted money out of Nvidia and big cloud companies like Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, and Microsoft. They moved that money into chipmakers that supply the broader AI infrastructure.
Barclays analyst Anshul Gupta described it as a “rotation out of AI hyperscalers into AI enablers.” That shift drove the rally in memory and CPU stocks.
Other chip-related names also gained. Marvell, which makes networking gear, rose about 200%. Arm, which licenses chip designs, climbed 134%. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF posted its best quarterly gain since it began trading in 2000, rising 71%.
Warning Signs Beneath the Surface
Despite the gains, some analysts are pointing to rising risk in the market. The S&P 500 looks calm, but single-stock volatility is at its highest level since 2015.
The spread between individual stock implied volatility and the broader index volatility is unusually wide. That gap suggests risk is concentrated in specific names rather than spread across the market.
Semiconductor stocks are among the most volatile. The Cboe Semiconductor ETF Volatility Index is roughly double the Russell 2000 and more than triple the S&P 500’s volatility level.
Micron and AMD have both more than doubled in price since March. If AI spending expectations shift or a macro surprise hits, analysts say those same stocks could see the sharpest declines.
The last time implied stock correlations were this low was summer 2024, just before the Bank of Japan’s rate hike caused a sharp market sell-off.
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