Meta’s move to sell access to its in-house artificial intelligence compute capacity has shaken U.S. markets, triggering a sharp selloff in semiconductor stocks while lifting its own shares.
The announcement challenges a core assumption that AI computing power remains scarce, raising the possibility of oversupply and forcing a broader reassessment of demand across the technology sector.
Semiconductor stocks slide as Meta pivots
Chipmakers led a steep market decline following the news. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index dropped 6.27% in a single session, with Micron falling 10.57%, Western Digital down 10.62%, Intel losing 9.03%, and Corning sliding 13%.
The selloff reflects concern that Meta’s shift could signal weaker demand for chips if the company reduces future procurement after building excess capacity.
Meta shares rise on monetization strategy
In contrast, Meta’s stock gained nearly 9% as traders reacted positively to plans to generate revenue from underused infrastructure.
The company has spent aggressively on AI over the past two years, allocating between $125 billion and $145 billion annually to GPUs, networking, and data centers. By the end of 2025, its computing capacity is expected to reach about 2 gigawatts, with projections nearing 5 gigawatts after an additional $135 billion in planned 2026 spending.
However, its AI platform has lagged competitors, leaving an estimated surplus equivalent to around 2.5 million H100 GPUs idle. By opening this capacity to external clients, Meta could generate between $20 billion and $30 billion annually, a modest contribution relative to its broader revenue.
Market split over implications
Market reaction has divided into two opposing views.
- Bearish outlook sees the move as evidence of AI compute oversupply, with potential cuts to chip orders ahead
- Bullish outlook interprets the strategy as a way to stabilize cash flow and improve returns while maintaining long-term AI investment
This split highlights uncertainty over whether Meta’s decision marks a peak in the hardware investment cycle or a tactical adjustment.
Broader AI spending outlook in focus
Meta’s pivot comes amid a period of massive capital spending by major cloud firms, with Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta collectively expected to invest roughly $725 billion in 2026.
Analysts warn that the broader impact now depends on how rivals respond. If companies such as Microsoft or Amazon adopt similar cost-control measures or slow infrastructure expansion, global demand for AI chips could weaken, affecting suppliers across foundries and memory markets.
So far, no comparable moves have been announced by other major players.
Volatility likely to persist
The divergence between Meta and semiconductor stocks points to a period of repricing across the sector. Capital is shifting away from hardware producers toward platforms capable of monetizing infrastructure more efficiently.
Uncertainty remains high, and equity movements may stay volatile until leading cloud companies clarify their capital spending strategies. Whether this represents a temporary pause or a structural reset in AI investment will determine the next phase for semiconductor demand and broader market direction.
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