Kioxia’s market cap halved amid AI sector concerns

1 hour ago 7

A month ago, Kioxia was the most valuable company in Japan, worth more than Toyota. Today, it serves as a cautionary tale about what happens when a stock rises 600%-plus on pure momentum and the momentum stops.

The NAND flash memory giant’s market cap dropped roughly 50% from its June 2026 peak, erasing approximately 29.5 trillion yen, or about $181.7B, in market value.

How Kioxia got here

The setup was straightforward: AI data centers need massive amounts of storage, and Kioxia makes the memory chips that fill those racks.

Investors extrapolated from that real demand and bid the stock up by more than 600% year-to-date heading into June 2026, with some tallies putting the gain closer to 857%.

At its peak, Kioxia’s market cap briefly crossed the 44 to 50 trillion yen range, equivalent to somewhere between $274B and $320B, vaulting it past Toyota to become Japan’s most valuable listed company.

The unraveling

The cracks appeared in late June 2026, when speculation began circulating about a potential delay to OpenAI’s IPO. That single rumor was enough to trigger a 12% single-session drop in Kioxia shares, which in turn rippled through the broader AI-adjacent semiconductor trade, pulling down Samsung and SK Hynix alongside it.

The selling continued into mid-July, with the stock dropping as much as 14% in another single session.

Kioxia’s slide knocked it out of Japan’s top three companies by market value, a position it had held for approximately one month.

Bain Capital chose that same July window to fully exit its stake in Kioxia, closing out a position that had generated significant returns during the AI-fueled run-up.

What this means for semiconductor investors

For investors still holding semiconductor exposure, the Kioxia correction raises a few questions worth sitting with. First, how much of the current valuation in AI-adjacent stocks reflects contracted revenue versus anticipated revenue? Memory chip pricing is notoriously cyclical, and the NAND market has seen severe downturns before the AI boom changed the narrative.

Second, the Bain Capital exit is worth noting as a signal. When a sophisticated long-term holder with deep knowledge of the business chooses the peak of an AI-driven rally to fully liquidate, it is reasonable to ask what they saw that retail holders might have missed.

Third, the contagion pattern matters. A single Kioxia session dragging down Samsung and SK Hynix suggests that institutional positioning in this sector is correlated enough that a sentiment shift in one name can move the whole group.

The 50% drawdown from peak does not necessarily mean the stock is cheap now. A stock that rises 857% and then falls 50% is still up roughly 328% from where it started the year.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article