Arm Holdings PLC (ARM) moved down by 9.24%. The Technology Equipment sector is down by 4.90%. The company underperformed the industry. Top 3 stocks by turnover in the sector: Micron Technology Inc (MU) down 10.68%; SanDisk Corporation (SNDK) down 12.49%; NVIDIA Corp (NVDA) down 3.29%.

A massive, coordinated global tech rout severely impacted semiconductor and high-growth artificial intelligence names on June 23, 2026. Triggered overnight by a sharp plunge in South Korea's chip-heavy index, where key industry players fell dramatically, the risk-off sentiment spread rapidly to U.S. markets. This international selloff was compounded by heightened anxiety ahead of Micron Technology's upcoming quarterly earnings. Because major memory and chip design partners are viewed as barometers for broader AI infrastructure spending, investors chose to tactically unwind highly crowded, profitable long positions across the entire semiconductor sector.
Arm Holdings was particularly vulnerable to this broad de-risking due to its extreme valuation premium. Having experienced an extraordinary rally throughout the year, driven by expanding high-margin licensing and royalties for its newer architecture and data-center chips, Arm was trading at a trailing price-to-earnings ratio exceeding 490x and a forward multiple of over 100x. This elevated pricing left the high-beta stock with virtually no room for error. Just days earlier, institutional analysts at New Street Research had downgraded the stock from Buy to Neutral, warning that the stock's massive run-up had pushed its price to an unsustainable premium over its intrinsic value. As sector-wide profit-taking intensified, this valuation decompression risk materialized rapidly, triggering severe downward volatility.
Monetary policy headwinds also played a significant role in deflating the high-flying AI trade. Traders aggressively repriced interest rate expectations, signaling a growing consensus that the Federal Reserve could implement further rate hikes by the end of December. The prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates to combat sticky consumer prices directly pressures the discounted cash flow valuations of growth-dependent technology companies like Arm. When capital costs are projected to rise, the premium multiples that investors are willing to pay for future earnings compress sharply.
The downward pressure on Arm's stock occurred despite some highly positive stock-specific updates. Earlier in the day, Bank of America had raised its price target on Arm to reflect extended spending visibility in artificial intelligence through 2028. Additionally, the company's robust underlying fundamentals—boosted by partnerships on key AI infrastructure projects and rapid adoption of its custom CPU designs—remain intact. However, these positive long-term growth catalysts were completely overshadowed by the immediate tide of tactical liquidations, macroeconomic rate worries, and residual concerns over recent insider share sales by senior company executives. Ultimately, the day's sharp downward movement reflects a broader market-driven correction of overextended AI expectations rather than a fundamental breakdown of Arm's business model.
Technically, Arm Holdings PLC (ARM) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of 3.151, indicating a buy signal. The RSI at 61.839 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 29.147 suggests buy condition. Please monitor closely.
Arm Holdings PLC (ARM) is in the Technology Equipment industry. Its latest annual revenue is $4.92B, ranking 23 in the industry. The net profit is $904.00M, ranking 17 in the industry. Company Profile

Over the past month, multiple analysts have rated the company as Buy, with an average price target of $265.56, a high of $500.00, and a low of $100.00.
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