Semiconductor Cycle Turning Point Emerges: SOXX's 18-Day Rally Clashes with Burry's Bearish Bets

Signals Emerge of a Global Semiconductor Cycle Turning Point: A Moment of Rupture Between Technical Frenzy and Structural Warnings
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOXX) has risen for 18 consecutive trading days—the longest such streak in its history. NVIDIA surged over 8% in a single session; Intel spiked 12% intraday; ASML and TSMC’s ADRs simultaneously hit new all-time highs. On the surface, the AI-computing narrative is sweeping global capital markets with near-religious momentum. Yet precisely at this moment, Michael Burry—the “Big Short” famed for his prescient call on the 2008 subprime crisis—has quietly established a highly telling derivatives position: purchasing deep-out-of-the-money SOXX put options with a strike price of $330 and an expiration date of January 2027. This seemingly paradoxical coexistence of bullish exuberance and bearish hedging is no market noise. Rather, it signals a pivotal juncture: short-term, technology-driven valuation surges are colliding head-on with medium-to-long-term supply-demand rebalancing, misaligned capital expenditure cycles, and escalating geopolitical friction.
Technically Driven Rally: Liquidity Siphoning and Valuation Overextension Under the AI Narrative
The core driver behind SOXX’s 18-day rally is not a genuine rebound in end-market demand—but rather the “premature pricing of expectations” fueled by the generative-AI–driven arms race for computing power. According to TrendForce’s latest data, global AI-server shipments surged 65% year-on-year in Q1 2024—but over 70% of those orders were concentrated among just four North American cloud providers, and a large share of chips have yet to translate into actual deployed compute capacity. NVIDIA’s H100 inventory turnover days have climbed to 182 (up from 96 in the same period last year), signaling mounting channel inventory pressure. More critically, semiconductor sector valuations have severely decoupled from traditional P/E or PEG frameworks: the forward P/E ratio for SOXX constituents now stands at 38.6x—62% above its 10-year average—while free cash flow yield (FCF Yield) has fallen to 2.1%, its lowest level since 2018. This pricing logic—“paying five years’ worth of future earnings for one year’s current stock price”—is fundamentally a technical trade enabled by liquidity abundance. When Fed rate-cut expectations waver and U.S. Treasury yields fluctuate more sharply, such high-beta assets become acutely vulnerable to rapid valuation repricing.
The Deeper Metaphor Behind Burry’s Put Options: Targeting the Structural Mismatch in Supply and Demand
Burry’s choice of a SOXX put option expiring in January 2027, with a $330 strike (SOXX currently trades near $520), is far from a simple bet on a pullback. Its structure embeds three strategic judgments:
First, temporally, early 2027 coincides precisely with the peak output phase following the current wave of AI-chip capital spending—TSMC’s and Samsung’s 3nm/2nm capacity expansions are scheduled for full-scale ramp-up in late 2026, after which advanced-node supply will face structural oversupply.
Second, the $330 strike corresponds to SOXX’s October 2022 low, suggesting Burry believes today’s valuation bubble will ultimately revert to its pre-pandemic mean.
Third, the low cost of deep-out-of-the-money options makes them an ideal instrument for hedging against “black swan” events. Alarmingly, Burry accurately shorted S&P 500 index futures in 2022—his core thesis then was the fundamental mismatch between soaring valuations and stagnating corporate earnings. His current positioning serves as a stark warning: this semiconductor rally lacks synchronous validation from real downstream demand. IDC data shows global PC shipments rose only 1.3% year-on-year in 2024; smartphone shipments declined 0.7%; and automotive electronics growth slowed to 4.2%. All three traditional demand engines have effectively sputtered out.
Escalating Geopolitical Disruption: Systemic Risk Spillover—from Supply-Chain Security to Maritime Sovereignty
If technical rallies and supply-demand imbalances represent endogenous cyclical tensions, then the recent cascade of geopolitical developments is accelerating their visible manifestation. Iran’s parliament declared “full sovereign jurisdiction” over the Strait of Hormuz, mandating that all vessels obtain Iranian permission to transit and requiring use of the term “Persian Gulf.” Though unlikely to halt oil tankers outright in the near term, this move has already materially raised global energy transport costs and insurance premiums. More profoundly, it resonates covertly with TSMC’s recent entanglement in U.S.–Iran strategic competition: the U.S. is pressuring allies to restrict chip exports to Iran, while Iran accelerates indigenous foundry capabilities—its Shahed-238 missile reportedly employs domestically produced 7nm-class control chips. Meanwhile, the EU’s 20th round of sanctions against Russia erroneously listed Chinese companies, revealing how Western tech controls are evolving from “entity lists” toward “supply-chain penetration audits.” When semiconductors’ geopolitical dimension shifts—from geographic dispersion of manufacturing (e.g., TSMC building fabs in the U.S.) to sovereignty over maritime chokepoints and politicization of technical standards—any assumption about the “eternal nature of global division of labor” faces fundamental challenge.
Institutional Portfolio Logic Reframed: Cascading Impacts on TMT Funds, Derivatives Strategies, and ETF Flows
The confluence of these signals is compelling professional investors to re-anchor their valuation frameworks. First, TMT-focused funds face tactical rebalancing: Morningstar data shows U.S. large-cap tech ETFs posted five consecutive weeks of net outflows through April 25, while semiconductor-sector ETFs saw $3.7 billion in outflows in a single week—indicating smart money is taking profits at elevated levels. Second, the derivatives market reveals subtle but telling shifts: the SOXX Volatility Index (SOXVIX) implied volatility has risen to 32.6%, its highest since November 2023; yet put-option open interest increased by +41%, significantly outpacing calls (+19%), reflecting sharply rising hedging demand. Third, ETF fund flows show pronounced divergence: leveraged long SOXX ETFs (e.g., SOXL) saw $1.2 billion in net redemptions in April, while inverse ETFs (e.g., SOXS) attracted $830 million in net inflows. Such “real-money” migration carries far greater market-signaling weight than analyst reports.
As the Philadelphia Index draws its 18th consecutive green candlestick on the chart, Burry’s put-option contract functions like a pressure sensor embedded within the market—it does not predict collapse, but faithfully registers the mounting internal tension. A true cycle turning point is never defined by a single indicator; it emerges only when technical frenzy, structural imbalance, and geopolitical disruption resonate in concert. For Chinese investors, rather than obsessing over whether “the bull market has ended,” the more consequential questions are: Can domestic AI-chip firms build differentiated application moats amid an era of computing-power oversupply? Can China’s equipment manufacturers accelerate substitution during this geopolitical window? And as the global semiconductor valuation anchor shifts—from Moore’s Law to a “geopolitical security coefficient”—have we prepared a new pricing model? The answers lie not in Wall Street’s options quotes—but in the lit cleanrooms of ChangXin Memory in Hefei, in the lithography-tool calibration labs of Shanghai Micro Electronics, and, most crucially, in every clear-headed mind that refuses to reduce technological progress to a mere candlestick game.