Semiconductor stocks are experiencing volatility this month, but investment firm Citi says there’s likely more upside to come, and any dips should be bought. Despite recent selling pressure from tariff concerns and mixed earnings, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index ($SOX) should recover, driven by artificial intelligence (AI) strength and data points showing the analog recovery remains in its infancy.
Citi’s top pick is Microchip Technology (MCHP), alongside “Buy” ratings on Texas Instruments (TXN) and Analog Devices (ADI). These three stocks represent compelling opportunities as analog companies guided third-quarter sales up 6% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) on average, with the analog upturn driven by low inventory, depressed margins, and improving demand.
The recent selloff was driven by tariff-related uncertainty and mixed earnings, with consensus estimates declining 6%. However, AI remains a bright spot, with companies like Meta (META), Microsoft (MSFT), and Alphabet (GOOG) (GOOGL) showing an $18 billion increase in capex for 2025.
While some tariff-related pull-ins are occurring in Auto and Industrial end markets, the fundamental analog recovery story remains intact, making this an opportune moment to buy quality semiconductor names on weakness.
Microchip Technology presents a compelling investment opportunity as the semiconductor industry recovers from its cyclical downturn. It delivered impressive second-quarter results with 10.8% sequential growth, driven by the strongest July bookings in three years and a book-to-bill ratio above 1.0 for consecutive quarters.
CFO Eric Bjornholt emphasized that March marked the bottom of the cycle, with distribution inventory normalizing after seven quarters of decline. The chipmaker is seeing strength in aerospace and defense, which account for 18% of the business, where Microchip serves as the largest semiconductor supplier to the U.S. Department of Defense. Data center demand is also recovering, and positions the company well for AI-related growth.
Microchip’s domestic manufacturing capabilities provide strategic advantages amid geopolitical tensions, with approximately 50% of wafer fabrication produced in U.S. facilities. It also expects gross margin expansion as inventory reserves and underutilization charges decline, targeting a long-term 65% gross margin from current 54% levels.