Overview:

The S&P 500 closed at 7,365.46, down 1.44%, as semiconductor stocks bore the brunt of a global tech rout traced to a near double-digit decline in South Korea's KOSPI. The Nasdaq Composite fell 572 points to 25,587.04, while the VIX jumped 12.79% to 19.49, signaling a meaningful uptick in hedging demand. Defensive names partially offset the damage — IBM gained 4.2% and Public Storage rose 4.4% — but breadth was decisively negative, with NYSE decliners outpacing advancers 1.32-to-1. FedEx beat Q4

NEW YORK — The Nasdaq Composite shed 572 points Tuesday, closing at 25,587.04, as a collapse in South Korean chip stocks ignited a global technology rout that left few corners of the semiconductor trade unscathed.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this is that today was not just a technical washout — it was a confidence test, and the chip complex failed it. The origin in Seoul matters because it signals that the AI-driven demand narrative is now being stress-tested at the supply chain level, not just in U.S. earnings calls. The real question here is whether the selling was front-running something structural — slower NAND demand, inventory builds — or whether it was an overreaction to one market’s bad session. I’m watching Nvidia’s $195 level closely: a close below that on Wednesday would tell me institutional holders are actually repositioning, not just trimming. The contrarian case? Half the U.S. market actually advanced today. That breadth nuance gets buried when Sandisk drops 12%, but it matters — this may be a sector purge, not a market breakdown.

The S&P 500 closed at 7,365.46, down 1.44%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average — insulated by its relative underweight in semiconductors — lost a modest 0.09% to 51,666.84. The Russell 2000 fell 0.96%. The CBOE Volatility Index surged 12.79% to 19.49, a level that reflects genuine hedging demand rather than routine fluctuation. NYSE decliners outnumbered advancers 1.32-to-1; on the Nasdaq, the ratio was 1.33-to-1.

What Came Out of Seoul and Why It Hit New York Hard

South Korea’s KOSPI, heavily weighted toward memory and logic chip manufacturers, fell nearly double digits before U.S. markets opened. That kind of move in a single session in a major index doesn’t dissipate overnight — it travels. By the time New York opened, the direction was already set.

The damage was concentrated but severe. Sandisk Corp. tumbled 11.73% to $2,006.99, the sharpest single-day decline among major chip names. Western Digital dropped 8.4% to $671, and Qualcomm fell 6.9% to $206.60. Nvidia shed 3.2% to $201.97, a relatively contained move by the standards of the group, but meaningful given its index weight. The S&P 500 Technology Sector closed down 4.13% on the day.

For more on whether this global chip pressure is enough to structurally break the AI trade thesis, see our earlier analysis: Is the Seoul Chip Shock Enough to Break the AI Trade?

Data Visual
Tuesday Sector Performance: Tech Leads Losses While Defensives Hold
Shows the percentage change across key S&P 500 sectors on June 23, 2026, illustrating the sharp divergence between technology and defensive segments.
Tuesday Sector Performance: Tech Leads Losses While Defensives Hold
Values in %

The honest counterargument is that breadth was not catastrophic. Utilities, real estate, and health care advanced. Staples held. The selling was concentrated, not systemic — and that distinction matters for how tomorrow sets up. A true market breakdown doesn’t leave half the tape green.

Key Stat
+12.79% — VIX to 19.49
A VIX print near 20 signals that options traders are pricing in elevated near-term risk — watch whether this level holds or fades into Wednesday’s open as the first real sentiment read on whether fear is spreading.

The Winners Nobody Is Talking About

While semiconductors dominated the tape, a quiet rotation into value and defensive names told a different story. IBM gained 4.2% to $263, powered by a dual catalyst: JPMorgan upgraded the stock to overweight, and Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring raised his price target from $225 to $267. Public Storage rose 4.4% to $334.43, and Accenture added 3.3% to $128.82.

Analyst Note
JPMorgan upgraded IBM to overweight on Tuesday, with Morgan Stanley’s Erik Woodring separately raising his price target to $267 from $225, citing IBM’s differentiated positioning in enterprise AI services — a business model that generates recurring revenue rather than depending on hardware chip cycles. The dual endorsement on the same session the chip sector cracked is not coincidental timing.

Oracle told a more complicated story. Shares fell 2.6% to $170.85 after the company disclosed it had cut approximately 21,000 jobs over the past year — nearly 13% of its total workforce — as AI adoption reshaped its operational model. Headcount fell to 141,000 from 162,000 a year ago. The market read that as a sign of structural pressure, not efficiency. Whether that interpretation holds depends on what Oracle reports when it next updates its cloud revenue trajectory.

AMC Entertainment collapsed 24% after announcing a $200 million registered direct offering of 95.25 million common shares to institutional investors. Dilution at that scale, at a company with AMC’s leverage profile, rarely ends differently. SpaceX, meanwhile, snapped a three-day losing streak, gaining 1% to close at $156.11 after a slide that had erased roughly $600 billion in market value. For context on whether that valuation was ever defensible, see our earlier piece: Is SpaceX Worth $2.4 Trillion After Just 8 Days Public?

Data Visual
Key Semiconductor Stock Closes vs. Prior Session: June 23, 2026
Compares the percentage moves of major semiconductor and tech names on Tuesday to highlight the breadth and severity of the single-session damage.
Key Semiconductor Stock Closes vs. Prior Session: June 23, 2026
Values in %

FedEx Delivers After the Bell — But the Guidance Does the Heavy Lifting

After markets closed, FedEx reported Q4 fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS of $6.60 on $25 billion in revenue, topping Wall Street estimates on both lines. Full-year revenue reached $94.7 billion, with adjusted EPS of $20.24 for FY2026. The company also completed the spin-off of FedEx Freight and exceeded its structural cost-cutting target by delivering over $1 billion in savings.

The guidance is what matters most here. FedEx projected fiscal 2027 revenue growth of approximately 11%, but its adjusted EPS range of $16.90 to $18.10 is notably below the FY2026 figure of $20.24. Management will need to explain that gap clearly. A company guiding 11% revenue growth while projecting lower earnings per share is either signaling heavy reinvestment or absorbing cost pressures it hasn’t fully disclosed. That tension will dominate the earnings call and deserves scrutiny from every analyst on the line.

For broader context on whether the services and logistics economy is signaling anything for the Federal Reserve’s calculus, our earlier piece is worth reading: Is the Services Economy Still Holding the Line for the Fed?

What Wednesday Has to Answer

The most consequential event on Wednesday’s calendar is Micron Technology’s Q3 fiscal 2026 earnings report. Wall Street expects EPS of approximately $20.38 and revenue of around $35.5 billion — a figure that would represent over 280% year-over-year growth. Is Micron Worth $1 Trillion After a 1,000% Earnings Surge? — a question we posed earlier this cycle — lands with entirely new urgency after today’s chip-sector carnage.

If Micron confirms strong demand and disciplined inventory management, the Seoul selloff looks like noise. If Micron’s results or guidance disappoint at any margin — guidance language, customer concentration, pricing per gigabyte — the selloff that started Tuesday morning in Korea has legs that reach well into July. The S&P 500’s 52-week range runs from 6,059.25 to 7,620.90; today’s close at 7,365.46 sits roughly 3.4% off the all-time high, which means there is meaningful air below before any technical support structure becomes relevant to the broader index. Wells Fargo’s decision to downgrade Ross Stores to equal weight with a $245 price target is a secondary story, but it reinforces a cautious tone toward consumer discretionary that rhymes with the defensive rotation visible in Tuesday’s tape.

Level / Event Value Signal
Nvidia technical support $195.00 A close below this level signals institutional repositioning, not just a trim
Micron Q3 FY26 EPS consensus $20.38 A miss or weak guidance will extend Tuesday’s chip selloff into broader AI names
VIX warning threshold 20.00 A sustained print above 20 shifts hedging behavior from tactical to defensive
S&P 500 52-week low 6,059.25 Distant floor; today’s close remains 21% above it — broad index damage is not yet a concern
FedEx FY27 EPS guidance midpoint $17.50 Below FY26 actual of $20.24 — earnings call explanation of the gap is critical Wednesday morning

The setup into Wednesday is binary in a way that is unusual even for earnings season. Micron either validates the AI demand story that has driven semiconductor valuations to historic multiples, or it hands the bears exactly the fundamental evidence they need. The broader tape held together better than the Nasdaq headline number suggests — but that resilience is on a short clock if the memory market’s own report card comes in below the line.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...