Qualcomm shares cratered 13% on May 14, closing at $185.42, as the semiconductor sector’s AI-fueled rally ran headfirst into a wall of reality. The drop effectively wiped out a chunk of the 25% gains Qualcomm had accumulated on the back of surging AI chip demand earlier this year.
NVIDIA and AMD both took hits of 8-10% during the same trading session. And for crypto investors watching from the sidelines, the contagion didn’t stop at traditional equities.
The AI trade unwinds, and crypto feels it
Render (RNDR), one of the more prominent tokens tied to decentralized AI computing, experienced dips of 5-7% as of May 10, even before the worst of the semiconductor sell-off hit.
What triggered the sell-off
Several factors converged to make May 14 particularly ugly for chip stocks.
First, reports surfaced indicating a slowdown in AI infrastructure demand. Hyperscalers, the massive cloud computing companies that have been pouring billions into AI data centers, reportedly began moderating their spending.
Second, regulatory scrutiny on major tech firms added another layer of uncertainty.
Third, the chip sector was simply overheated. A 25% run-up driven by AI enthusiasm created valuations that left little room for anything less than perfection. Qualcomm’s Q2 earnings report, released on April 28, actually beat expectations. But it also revealed vulnerabilities in the company’s supply chain.
Adding to the pressure, US-China trade tensions continued to cast a shadow over the entire semiconductor industry. Qualcomm had announced partnerships for AI-enabled automotive chips on April 20, signaling its push into new verticals.
The crypto connection runs deeper than you think
The sell-off in RNDR around the same period illustrates this dynamic clearly. Analysts from Messari and CoinDesk revealed that this retreat could serve as a necessary correction, potentially redirecting enthusiasm toward crypto projects tied to decentralized AI that have been overshadowed by the NVIDIA-led rally in traditional markets.
For now, the 5-7% dip in tokens like RNDR is modest compared to Qualcomm’s 13% haircut. But if hyperscaler spending continues to moderate and the broader semiconductor downturn deepens, those losses could accelerate.
