Goldman Sachs: Chip pullback is a buy, but no longer a 'basket buy'

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Mars Finance News, July 7 — Goldman Sachs stated in its latest report that while there are still investment opportunities after the semiconductor stock correction, AI chip trading has entered a more selective phase, and investors should no longer simply buy the entire sector. The bank pointed out that the PHLX Semiconductor Index has risen more than 80% year-to-date, significantly outperforming the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq. This strong performance has raised the bar for subsequent earnings results, making the risk-reward profile more differentiated ahead of the Q2 earnings season. Goldman Sachs remains optimistic about certain sub-sectors, including CPUs, ASICs, memory, and semiconductor equipment. The bank believes these areas benefit more directly from AI infrastructure expansion and have relatively higher demand visibility. In terms of individual stocks, Goldman Sachs highlighted AMD and Applied Materials. AMD benefits from server CPU and AI-related demand, while Applied Materials benefits from advanced manufacturing and memory capital expenditures. However, Goldman Sachs is more cautious about mobile supply chain companies, as well as some semiconductor firms with higher valuations or weaker demand.
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