Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks Today: Why Nvidia, Micron, and TSMC Are Sinking

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Several artificial intelligence (AI) chip stocks are seeing broad sell-offs in Monday's trading. Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), and Micron (NASDAQ: MU) are among the big names participating in the pullback and were down 2.4%, 3.4%, and 4.8%, respectively, as of 12:45 p.m. ET.

Semiconductor stocks are getting hit with a wave of bearish pressures following news that the U.S. will take new steps to limit the export of advanced chips used for AI. Nvidia, Micron, and TSMC occupy important positions in the AI chip space, and each company is seeing a significant valuation pullback today.

Nvidia, Micron, and TSMC fall on expanded AI chip regulations

Before the market opened this morning, U.S. officials announced they would be implementing new regulations that will put additional restrictions on the export of AI chips and semiconductor manufacturing equipment. The move is aimed at maintaining technological advantages for the U.S. and its allies and limiting AI progress for China and other adversarial countries.

The new regulations will put a hard cap on the number of AI chips that can be exported to countries including China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. Meanwhile, close U.S. allies will have unrestricted access to advanced semiconductors and manufacturing equipment for artificial intelligence technologies. The new regulations will take effect 120 days after their initial publication.

Given the news, it's not surprising that Nvidia, Micron, and TSMC are seeing sell-offs today. While each company operates in a different corner of the semiconductor industry, they're all playing an important role in the design and production of advanced processors that are at the foundations of the AI revolution.

Nvidia is the leading designer of high-performance graphics processing units (GPUs) for AI data centers. While there are other players in the space, the company has a dominant technology and market share lead and stands as the most influential hardware designer in the space. Restrictions were already in place that prevented the company's most advanced processors from being shipped to China, and the new regulations look poised to expand the breadth of the export limitations.

Meanwhile, Micron is a leading producer of memory solutions. The company's high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips are included in some of Nvidia's most advanced processors, and other memory and storage solutions from the tech specialist are also being used in AI data centers.

Compared to Nvidia and TSMC, Micron could wind up seeing less direct impacts from the new regulations. But while it's possible that the company's memory chips won't be specifically included in the expanding ban list, the business could still wind up facing a tougher growth environment because its chips are included as components in processors from Nvidia and other AI leaders.