Nvidia, AMD spark chip-stock rebound on AI spending plans — what to watch this week

Nvidia, AMD spark chip-stock rebound on AI spending plans — what to watch this week

New York, Feb 8, 2026, 12:52 (EST) — The session has ended.

Semiconductor shares in the U.S. are coming off a sharp bounce Friday, with the Philadelphia chip index (.SOX) rallying 5.7% as investors piled back in on hopes that AI data-center spending will keep fueling chip orders. Nvidia’s surge led the move. Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird, flagged “real demand for AI products” despite recent turbulence in the group. (Reuters)

This shift is catching attention because the once-unified “AI trade” has fractured. According to Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo, buyers are now gravitating toward the “picks and shovels” — hardware behind data centers — and showing caution on software stocks, which could see stiffer competition or slower returns. (Reuters)

Amazon’s capex forecast lands squarely amid the industry’s broader pivot. The company said it plans to spend about $200 billion on capital expenditures in 2026—money earmarked for data centers, servers and gear. Traders took the news as a positive for suppliers, but Big Tech’s spending habits continue to draw tough questions from Wall Street. “The market just dislikes the substantial amount of money that keeps getting put into capex,” said Dave Wagner, portfolio manager at Aptus Capital Advisors. (Reuters)

Nvidia (NVDA.O) jumped 7.9% to finish at $185.41 on Friday. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O) picked up 8.3%, closing at $208.44, and Broadcom (AVGO.O) moved 7.2% higher, ending the day at $332.92. Micron (MU.O) advanced 3.1% to $394.69, while Intel (INTC.O) climbed 4.9% to settle at $50.59. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) gained 5.4%, ending at $401.65. (Yahoo Finance)

A bullish industry forecast added more fire to the sector. The Semiconductor Industry Association on Friday predicted global chip sales would reach $1 trillion in 2026, after a 25.6% jump in 2025. CEO John Neuffer said execs he’s talked to are still seeing books filled with orders, even as they puzzle over how long the AI surge will last. “No one knows what’s going to happen with the AI build out a year from now, but my orders are completely full,” Neuffer told Reuters. (Reuters)

Not everyone’s dodging trouble. The crunch in memory chips has started to hit consumer electronics, and Apple CEO Tim Cook warned that memory chip prices are set to “increase sharply.” That’s left the market wondering: how much higher can handset makers nudge prices before buyers hit pause? (Reuters)

But shortages driving prices up can just as easily push volumes down, hitting chip suppliers differently. The larger worry for the chip rally? Investors could snap back to the nagging question: Is all this spending actually turning into profits quickly, or is it just straining balance sheets and tempting more companies to bring chipmaking inside.

All eyes are on macro data this week. The U.S. January jobs numbers hit Wednesday, Feb. 11, with CPI inflation for January coming Friday, Feb. 13 — both dropping at 8:30 a.m. ET. Bond yields and rate bets? They tend to drive the mood for high-multiple tech names. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)

Chip pipeline action this week includes several smaller players and equipment makers reporting. Diodes Incorporated (DIOD.O) is up first, with quarterly numbers and a call on Tuesday, Feb. 10. Applied Materials (AMAT.O) follows with its fiscal Q1 report, set for Thursday, Feb. 12. (investor.diodes.com)

Semiconductor names face a clear hurdle now: does Friday’s AI-fueled rally carry over to Monday’s opening bell? After that, eyes on Wednesday’s jobs report and Friday’s CPI—rate jitters need to stay in check for buyers to hang around.

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