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US Semiconductor Sector Hit by Google TurboQuant Shock, Are AI Storage Stocks Still Worth Investing In?

Source Tradingkey

TradingKey - Google ( GOOGL )'s newly released TurboQuant technology was originally intended as a seemingly low-level algorithmic optimization update, yet it unexpectedly triggered a collective decline in the global semiconductor sector. The core reason is simple—it touched upon the most sensitive area of the current AI industry: memory demand.

According to official descriptions, TurboQuant can significantly compress vector data and KV cache occupancy without notably impacting model accuracy, theoretically reducing memory requirements during the AI inference stage by several times. This statement was quickly interpreted by the market as a sign that future AI dependence on memory products such as High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) and DRAM may not be as rigid as previously imagined.

Following the news, the global semiconductor sector plummeted almost in sync, with U.S. and Asian markets resonating in a correction of significant magnitude. This clearly was not short-term volatility caused by an ordinary piece of technical news, but rather a collective reassessment of the "AI memory scarcity narrative."

What does the market's reaction mean?

Judging by market performance, this round of declines is characterized by synchronized timing and broad coverage. Micron , Western Digital , Seagate , Sandisk and other U.S. storage companies generally saw declines ranging from 6% to double digits; in Asian markets, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix also weakened in tandem.

This trend usually does not suggest problems with corporate fundamentals, but rather resembles a collective pricing correction following the shaking of a macro logic. In other words, the market did not immediately dismiss the demand growth brought by AI, but began recalculating a question: if the memory required per unit of computing power decreases, does the high premium previously granted to storage companies still hold up?

Over the past year, the logic behind the semiconductor sector's rally has been very clear: AI training and inference have placed extremely high demands on memory, while HBM supply remains relatively limited, creating a classic tight balance of "surging demand plus constrained supply." In such an environment, rising prices, increased profits, and elevated valuations were almost inevitable.

The emergence of TurboQuant effectively inserts a variable into this logic: if technological progress can partially substitute for hardware stacking, the originally linear demand growth curve might become flatter.

The Essence of Technical Impact: Not Reducing Demand, but Changing Demand Structure

It should be emphasized that TurboQuant does not mean "memory is no longer important." More accurately, it affects the "scale of memory required per AI task," rather than the overall demand itself.

The reality is that AI systems often exhibit a typical characteristic—efficiency improvements tend not to reduce total demand, but instead may lead to larger-scale application expansion. That is, if inference costs decrease, companies are more motivated to deploy more model instances or even expand into new application scenarios.

From this perspective, TurboQuant is more likely to bring about changes in the demand structure rather than a contraction in total demand. For example: extreme dependence on high-end HBM may be slightly alleviated; the cost-performance advantage of mid-to-low-end DRAM or storage solutions may be re-emphasized; the weight of software optimization in AI systems will increase, while the marginal utility of hardware "spec-stacking" will decline.

This also explains why the market first experienced sharp fluctuations—in the short term, investors are more likely to amplify concerns about reduced demand, while their reaction to the potential benefits of application expansion remains relatively lagged.

The Divergence of Global Leaders May Have Only Just Begun

Looking at the current industrial structure, the impact on different storage manufacturers is not entirely the same.

Companies represented by Micron and SK Hynix are making massive bets on the HBM track. This segment is directly tied to the expansion of AI computing power and is the core growth engine of the current market. If the growth rate of AI demand for HBM slows down in the future, the valuation elasticity of such companies will be more directly affected.

In contrast, manufacturers more focused on traditional storage like Western Digital and Seagate, while also dragged down by sentiment, have a logic tied more to data storage capacity rather than high-performance memory itself, so their impact path is slightly different.

Further down, a company like Samsung Electronics, with its more complex business structure, actually possesses some cushioning space—having both high-end memory and mature processes and diversified product lines, it can hedge somewhat during cyclical fluctuations.

This means that the semiconductor sector may no longer move in lockstep as it did over the past year, but will gradually enter a phase of divergence.

Changes in Capital Behavior: Shifting from Momentum Logic to Verification Logic

Another noteworthy change is that capital behavior itself is undergoing a shift.

At the height of the AI rally, capital tended to price in the future in advance—as long as the direction was certain, investors were willing to pay a premium for "potential scarcity." However, as technological paths begin to diverge, such as the emergence of optimization solutions like TurboQuant, the market has started to treat long-term expectations more cautiously.

Simply put, it is a gradual shift from "buy first, verify later" to "verify first, price later."

For the high-volatility, high-expectation storage sector, this means short-term volatility could increase significantly. Any marginal changes in demand, technology, or supply will be quickly amplified and reflected in prices.

What to Watch Next

In the short term, the market will likely continue to debate the actual impact of TurboQuant, including its implementation in real production environments and whether other tech giants will follow similar optimization paths.

Looking ahead, the factors that truly determine the direction of the semiconductor sector remain several more fundamental variables:

1. Whether AI computing power investment continues to expand

2. Whether the pace of data center construction slows down

3. Whether the supply of HBM and advanced DRAM remains tight

4. Whether software optimization will systematically replace some hardware demand

TurboQuant is more like a warning signal, telling the market that the evolution of the AI industry does not only follow the path of "hardware stacking." When technology begins to lean toward the efficiency side, the originally singular upward logic becomes complex.

This is also why this decline appears somewhat sudden, yet not entirely unexpected. The market is not rejecting AI, but rather re-evaluating how growth in this sector will ultimately be realized.

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Nothing in this material constitutes investment advice, personal recommendation, investment research, an offer, or a solicitation to buy or sell any financial instrument. The content has been prepared without consideration of your individual investment objectives, financial situation, or needs, and should not be treated as such.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance and/or results. Forward-looking scenarios or forecasts are not a guarantee of future performance. Actual results may differ materially from those anticipated.
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