AI chip rally faces reality check, but bubble fears may be overdone: Adrian Mowat
South Korean chip stocks are experiencing a temporary dip, not an AI bubble burst, according to EM-Equity Strategist Adrian Mowat. He attributes the volatility to strong earnings revisions driven by tight supply and demand. The next phase requires...

He believes sentiment could improve if Indian IT companies demonstrate tangible benefits from AI adoption.
Rally backed by fundamentals
On whether the recent sell-off signals the start of an AI bubble bursting, Mowat said: "I am not sure if the phrase 'bubble bursting' is correct. The movement in Micron, SanDisk, Hynix and Samsung has been driven by very dramatic positive earnings revisions because the supply-demand dynamics for semiconductors are so tight."
"The next phase should be identifying which companies are actually increasing revenue or reducing costs by applying AI. We need to see that for the AI theme to progress over the next couple of years," he added.
Korean market volatility likely to continue
Commenting on foreign investor outflows from Korea, Mowat said: "I do not think there is a short-term change in the flows from foreign investors. We are going to spend the rest of this year seeing high volatility in these memory names."
On valuations, he added: "Their PE multiples actually look quite reasonable, and there is no clear evidence that there is a big supply increase coming in this sector."
India has not escaped AI concerns
Discussing the impact on India, Mowat said: "India has hardly been insulated from this. We have had the tech sector down something like 30-plus percent year-to-date because of AI and the fear of AI."
He believes sentiment could improve if Indian IT companies demonstrate tangible benefits from AI adoption. "If we were to start seeing some of the Indian IT companies proving that they can help customers use AI effectively, then that would definitely change sentiment," he said.
AI story entering its next phase
While semiconductor companies have been the biggest beneficiaries of the AI boom, Mowat believes the next leg of the rally will depend on businesses translating AI investments into higher revenues and improved profitability. Until then, he expects volatility to remain elevated, even though the broader AI investment theme remains fundamentally intact.
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