The SOXX's record-setting rally is masking a deterioration in momentum that has preceded pullbacks in each of the past three similar instances.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index is trading at all-time highs, yet its relative strength index has fallen further below the overbought threshold — a bearish divergence that historically signals waning momentum in the chip sector.
The divergence occurs when price sets new highs but the RSI prints a lower high, indicating the upward move lacks the conviction of prior advances, according to MarketWatch. The RSI, which measures the magnitude of recent price changes on a scale of zero to 100, has been declining since its most recent peak even as the SOXX continued climbing.
The SOXX has been on a record-setting run, with chip stocks broadly rallying on sustained demand for AI-related semiconductors and data center infrastructure. Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices and Broadcom have all contributed to the index's gains. Yet the RSI's failure to confirm the new highs suggests the buying pressure driving the rally is diminishing.
The divergence matters because semiconductors have been the primary driver of the broader tech rally. If the SOXX corrects, it could drag down the Nasdaq and S&P 500, given the sector's outsized weighting in both indices. A pullback in chip stocks would ripple through the technology sector, affecting exchange-traded funds and institutional portfolios with heavy semiconductor exposure.
The bearish signal comes as the semiconductor industry faces crosscurrents. While AI chip demand from hyperscale cloud providers remains strong, concerns are building around inventory buildup in non-AI segments and potential export restrictions that could curb revenue for companies with exposure to China. TSMC, the dominant foundry for most advanced chips, has flagged capacity constraints that could limit near-term supply growth.
Among individual names, Nvidia has been the largest contributor to the SOXX's gains. But the RSI divergence suggests the rally may be broadening into lower-quality names — a pattern that often precedes sector peaks. Advanced Micro Devices, which has trailed Nvidia in the AI chip race, has also seen its stock climb on hopes of capturing secondary demand.
The technical setup echoes patterns seen in prior years when the SOXX's RSI diverged from price ahead of corrections. In each case, the index eventually recovered and resumed its uptrend, but the corrections wiped out several weeks of gains.
The timing of the divergence is notable given the upcoming earnings season for major chip companies. Nvidia reports next month, and any disappointment on guidance could accelerate the selloff. The options market is already pricing in a move of roughly 8% in either direction following Nvidia's report, according to data from Trade Alert. A downside move of that magnitude would compound the technical weakness signaled by the RSI divergence.
For investors, the divergence raises the question of whether to take profits or hold through a potential drawdown. Nvidia trades at a premium multiple that leaves little room for disappointment. A correction in the SOXX would likely hit the highest-multiple names hardest, while companies with more diversified revenue streams — such as Broadcom or TSMC — may prove more resilient.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.