This week, U.S. equities experienced a textbook case of a "rate shock + sector rotation" market structure. A rate hike projection report from Bank of America (BofA) triggered a sharp sell-off in semiconductor stocks on Monday, with SOXX plunging 8% in a single session. At the same time, Micron Technology (MU) delivered one of its strongest Q3 earnings reports on record, with revenue reaching $41.46 billion, significantly beating market expectations by approximately 16%.
Based on proprietary market data compiled by MEXC RealStocks team, this report provides a comprehensive review of a highly information-dense trading week.
Date | Event | Market Reaction |
June 22 | Bank of America Research (BofA) published a report forecasting three consecutive Fed rate hikes of 25 bps each in September, October, and December | Global semiconductor stocks saw heavy concentrated selling at the open |
June 22, Intraday | South Korea's KOSPI triggered a circuit breaker | Net foreign capital outflows reached up to $2.5 billion in a single session |
June 22, Close | SOXX (Philadelphia Semiconductor ETF) tumbled 8% | The Nasdaq declined 2.2%, while the S&P 500 shed 1.4% |
June 23 | President Trump signed two executive orders on quantum technology | IBM bucked the broader market trend, rising 4.5% |
June 24 | U.S. June Manufacturing PMI came in at 55.7 | A three-year high reading, with no immediate signs of economic recession |
June 25
| The U.S. Dollar Index surpassed the 101 level, reaching a new high since 2026 | The Japanese yen continued to face downward pressure, approaching a two-year low |
BofA Rate Hike Forecast: Key Data Summary
Current federal funds rate range: 3.50%–3.75%
Projected terminal rate: 4.25%–4.50%
Expected rate hike path: Sep +25bp → Oct +25bp → Dec +25bp
Market-implied probability of an October rate hike (CME FedWatch): Above 60%
Market impact: High-valuation tech and AI stocks are likely to face the most immediate pressure, while financials and consumer staples are positioned to outperform.
MEXC Research Perspective: This is the first time since the beginning of 2026 that markets have priced in "three consecutive rate hikes" as a base-case scenario rather than a tail risk. Historical data suggests that during similar tightening cycles, such as in 2022, the SOXX index experienced a maximum drawdown of approximately -65%. However, current fundamentals are supported by a structurally stronger AI capital expenditure cycle. The key variable going forward is whether HBM (high-bandwidth memory) demand can sustain its super-cycle trajectory.
Micron (MU) reported its fiscal Q3 2026 earnings this week, with every key financial metric surpassing all-time highs:
Financial Metric | Q3 Actual | Consensus Estimate | Beat by | Prior Quarter (Q2) | YoY (Q3 Prior Year) |
Revenue | $41.46B | $35.7B | +16.1% | $38.1B | +~92% |
GAAP EPS | $24.67 | $20.10 | +22.7% | $21.30 | Swung to Profit |
Gross Margin | ~58% | 54% | +4ppt | 55% | +~20ppt |
Q4 Revenue Guidance | $50B ± $1B | $42.9B | +16.5% | — | — |
HBM Key Data Overview:
Metric | Data |
HBM share of total revenue | Substantial increase (High single digits to double digits) |
HBM3E capacity status | Fully sold out through full-year 2026 |
HBM4 mass production timeline | Aligned with NVIDIA's next-generation Blackwell platform; mass production targeted for H2 2026 |
HBM4 bandwidth increase vs. HBM3E | Approximately +50% |
Key customers | NVIDIA, AMD, Google, Microsoft, Amazon |
What makes this earnings report truly "historic"?
An exceptionally rare earnings beat: Revenue surpassed expectations by +16% — a feat nearly unheard of among large-cap semiconductor companies, occurring only once since 2022.
A Q4 outlook that defies expectations: Forward guidance of $50 billion comes in $7.1 billion above consensus, signaling that Micron's growth is driven by disciplined price increases rather than volume expansion alone.
Supply fully locked in, a formidable supply-side moat: Every unit of HBM capacity for 2026 is already committed. Any incremental demand cannot be accommodated until 2027, placing pricing power squarely in Micron's hands.
Ticker | Company | Sector | Weekly Return | YTD Return | Core Thesis |
MU
| Micron Technology | Memory/HBM | 0% | +294% | Solid Q3 earnings were offset by rate-hike anxiety in the near term; the HBM supercycle thesis remains firmly intact. |
AMD | Advanced Micro Devices | AI Chips
| -2.2% | +146% | AI inference demand continues to expand; the broad SOXX pullback has brought valuations down to recent lows. |
INTC | Intel | AI Chips / Foundry | -4.4% | +258% | The Apple foundry partnership has officially materialized, creating a dual growth engine spanning AI PCs and wafer foundry services. |
GLW | Corning | Optical Communications | +8.3% | +156% | The official launch of Glass Bridge, combined with surging optical interconnect demand from AI data centers, drove GLW to lead tech sector gains this week. |
IBM | International Business Machines | Quantum Computing | -3.76% | -13% | Supported by Trump's quantum executive order, IBM gained 4.5% against the tide during a broad AI market sell-off, emerging as a defensive safe haven. |
UAL | United Airlines | Aviation | +12% | +20% | Falling oil prices have meaningfully reduced fuel costs, propelling UAL to rank as the second-best performing sector in the broader market this week. |
Note: All data reflects closing prices as of June 25, 2026.
Key Performance Patterns This Week:
High-AI-exposure, elevated-valuation names (AMD, INTC): continued to face headwinds from rate-hike expectations, declining broadly in line with the SOXX index.
Indirect AI beneficiaries with more reasonable valuations (GLW, UAL): outperformed the broader market, buoyed by sector rotation tailwinds.
MU: delivered strong earnings, yet shares finished essentially flat—suggesting the market had already priced in the beat. A clearer directional move will likely hinge on Q4 guidance.
HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) is a critical foundational component for training and inference in large-scale AI models. Leading GPUs — including the NVIDIA H100, H200, and B100 — all integrate HBM to deliver massive data throughput to GPU cores at ultra-low latency.
HBM demand from AI clusters is growing exponentially:
AI Model Generation | Representative Models | HBM Capacity per GPU | Cluster Scale (Reference) |
First-generation large models | GPT-3 | ~80GB | Hundreds of GPUs |
Current mainstream | GPT-4 / Llama 3 | 128–192GB | Thousands of GPUs |
Next generation | Blackwell B200 | 192–288GB | 10,000+ GPU scale |
Edge inference | Inference clusters across multiple vendors | Rapidly expanding | Incremental demand continuing to build |
First Half (2024–2025): Supply scarcity is driving price increases, with Micron and SK Hynix among the first to benefit. However, production capacity is struggling to keep up with demand, leaving a significant portion of orders unfulfilled.
Second Half (2026–2027 and Beyond):
HBM4 Mass Production: Bandwidth improves by 50%, combined with next-generation Blackwell and MI400 platforms, driving a sharp acceleration in demand.
Inference-Side Demand Surge: Previously, HBM was primarily used on the training side. With major companies now scaling AI inference deployments, consumption has increased exponentially.
Broad Edge AI Penetration: Emerging use cases — including AI PCs, AI-enabled smartphones, and intelligent automotive computing — are rapidly expanding HBM's addressable application landscape.
Micron Gains Pricing Power: Locked-in capacity enables tighter supply control, facilitating a strategic transition for Micron from "passively fulfilling orders" to "proactively setting prices."
Key Risks:
A scenario involving three consecutive Fed rate hikes could place significant valuation pressure on high-PE growth stocks.
Accelerating domestic substitution within mainland China's semiconductor sector, driven by the continued rise of local competitors such as CXMT, poses a growing competitive threat.
A broader macroeconomic slowdown could prompt cloud providers to reduce capital expenditures, weighing on overall demand.
Sector | Early Tightening Phase (0→2%) | Mid Tightening Phase (2→4%) | Late Tightening Phase (4%+) |
Tech / AI (High Valuation) | Valuation headwinds ↓↓ | Significant selloff ↓↓↓ | Troughs and recovers ↑ |
Financials (Banks) | Strong tailwind ↑↑ | Sustained outperformance ↑ | Momentum fades → |
Consumer Staples | Defensive outperformance ↑ | Performance flattens → | Relative underperformance ↓ |
Aviation | Largely driven by oil price movements | Largely driven by oil price movements | Generally benefits from robust travel demand |
Quantitative / Thematic Strategies | Primarily event- and policy-driven; low correlation with broad macro trends |
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Note: Data is based on the historical relative sector performance observed during the 2022–2023 rate-hike cycle.
Key Distinctions Between 2026 and 2022:
2022: Rate hikes commenced from near-zero interest rates, valuations were significantly inflated, and fundamental earnings support had yet to be established.
2026: The rate-hike cycle begins from a 3.5% baseline, AI sector earnings have been firmly validated (MU YoY growth: +92%), and the scope for valuation compression is considerably more contained.
Conclusion: The current rate-hike cycle is more likely to represent a "temporary disruption" than a "structural trend reversal." Investors are better served by reassessing portfolio composition and rebalancing allocation, rather than reacting hastily by liquidating positions.
While chip stocks faced broad-based selling pressure and declined across the board this week, Corning (GLW) defied the trend with a sharp +8.3% rally — emerging as the clear standout among tech names during the same period.
Key Catalyst: Official Launch of Glass Bridge.
Glass Bridge is a glass-based optical interconnect solution developed by Corning exclusively for AI supercomputer data centers. It is engineered to replace traditional copper cables, enabling ultra-short-range, ultra-high-speed optical signal transmission directly between chips.
Metric | Traditional Copper Cable | Glass Bridge Optical Interconnect |
Transmission Distance | <1 m | <5 cm (chip-level) |
Bandwidth Density | Limited | ~4x improvement |
Power Consumption | High | Reduced by ~60% |
AI Data Center Compatibility | Compatible with existing architecture | Purpose-built for AI GPU clusters |
AI data centers are rapidly shifting from copper-based to optical interconnect infrastructure. As the world's largest supplier of optical fiber and optical components, Corning is among the most direct beneficiaries of this structural transition. GLW has already climbed +156% year-to-date, and demand for glass optical interconnects appears to be only in the early innings of a much larger growth cycle.
United Airlines (UAL) surged 12% this week, topping the weekly gainers list.
Key Driver Analysis:
Factor | Description |
Declining Oil Prices | Crude oil declined approximately 3–4% this week. Jet fuel represents the single largest variable cost for airlines, comprising 30–40% of total operating expenses. |
Manufacturing PMI at 55.7 | Sustained economic momentum continues to support resilient business travel demand. |
Peak Summer Travel Season | Q3 is historically the strongest quarter for travel demand, and UAL's quarterly revenue performance has consistently peaked during this period. |
Industry Supply Constraints | Ongoing Boeing delivery delays continue to restrict new capacity additions across the industry, keeping airfares at elevated levels. |
Indicative estimate: for every $10/barrel decline in oil prices, UAL stands to save approximately $300–400 million in annual fuel costs (based on an estimated annual fuel consumption of roughly 120 million gallons). The implied annualized fuel cost savings from this week's oil price decline were a direct catalyst for the market's upward revision of UAL's earnings outlook.
This week, FDX will report its first full-quarter earnings following the Freight business spin-off — making it the most compelling real-world test of whether the "Manufacturing PMI 55.7" reading reflects genuine economic momentum:
Metric | Data |
Q4 Revenue | $25 billion |
Key Event | The Freight business began trading as an independent public company on June 1 |
Macro Confirmation | Manufacturing PMI hit 55.7 — its highest level since 2022 — signaling that logistics demand is substantive, not speculative |
Core Significance | Manufacturing recovery → rising freight volumes → FDX revenue growth. These three data points form a coherent, end-to-end logical verification chain |
On June 23, President Trump signed two executive orders on quantum technology, with the following explicit mandates:
Immediate Market Reaction:
IBM — the largest publicly listed company in the quantum computing space — bucked the broader chip stock sell-off, gaining +4.5%
Pure-play quantum computing stocks, including IonQ and Rigetti, similarly moved higher in tandem
What Sets the Quantum Computing Sector Apart:
Quantum computing remains in the early stages of commercialization, with stock performance driven primarily by policy catalysts rather than profit fundamentals. Its lower correlation with the interest-rate sensitivity that weighs on AI and semiconductor stocks is precisely why, during a week of concentrated rate-hike fears, the quantum computing sector emerged as one of the market's standout defensive plays.
Q1: SOXX dropped 8% in a single session. Is it still a viable time to build positions in the AI/semiconductor sector?
This selloff was driven by a liquidity shock — specifically, a repricing of rate-hike expectations — rather than any deterioration in underlying fundamentals. Micron's Q3 earnings came in ahead of expectations, confirming that demand for AI hardware has not been materially impacted by the rate-hike cycle. Historical data shows that in the month following each single-day 8% decline in SOXX, the index posted a positive return approximately 70% of the time (sample period: 2018–2026, 7 occurrences). As such, the priority right now should be disciplined position management, rather than attempting to call short-term price direction.
Q2: Micron (MU) has been flat this week. Why hasn't the stock responded to its strong earnings report?
The market had largely priced in this earnings result well in advance — Micron's stock had already surged a cumulative +294% heading into the release — giving rise to the classic "buy the rumor, sell the news" dynamic. More critically, whether Q4 guidance can reach the $50 billion mark remains the key price catalyst for the next leg, and investors are closely monitoring whether that target can be confirmed in the upcoming Q4 earnings report. A muted near-term stock reaction does not signal that the long-term uptrend has run its course.
Q3: HBM 2026 capacity is fully booked — Are there still investment opportunities?
Fully booked capacity means Micron now holds the negotiating leverage to secure 2027 orders and push prices even higher. From a supply chain perspective, downstream AI chip manufacturers such as NVIDIA and AMD typically pay advance deposits to guarantee future HBM4 capacity allocations — providing Micron with more predictable and stable cash flow. Meanwhile, the mass production ramp of HBM4 in support of the next-generation Blackwell platform is set to become Micron's next major performance growth catalyst.
Q4: Following three consecutive rate hikes, which sectors stand to benefit most?
Historically, the sectors that tend to perform most consistently during a rate-hike cycle include: banks and financials (benefiting from widening net interest margins), energy (whose hard-asset characteristics become more attractive in an inflationary environment), and consumer staples companies with strong pricing power. Notably, the current rate-hike cycle presents two distinctive rotation opportunities: the airline sector (benefiting from a concurrent pullback in oil prices) and the quantum computing sector (driven by policy catalysts that are largely decoupled from the broader macro cycle) — both of which are positioned to deliver differentiated excess returns.
Disclaimer: This content is independently compiled by the MEXC RealStocks team based on publicly available market information as of June 25, 2026, and is intended for reference purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. Markets involve risk. Please invest with caution.