The Nasdaq composite fell on Tuesday as sharp losses in memory chip stocks Micron and Sandisk pulled the index lower, even as SpaceX shares rebounded to partially offset the damage.
Micron and Sandisk led the tech selloff, with both stocks tumbling in a move that dragged on the broader Nasdaq. Memory chip makers are especially sensitive to shifts in supply-demand balance and pricing cycles, and any weakness in either company tends to ripple quickly through the semiconductor sector. The two stocks carry enough index weight that their combined drop was enough to push the Nasdaq into negative territory for the session.
SpaceX, by contrast, moved higher on the day. The rebound provided some cushion for growth-oriented investors, though it was not enough to offset the pressure coming from the chip side of the market.
Why Memory Chips Are Moving Markets Right Now
Memory semiconductors sit at the intersection of consumer electronics, data center buildout, and artificial intelligence infrastructure. When major producers like Micron stumble, it often signals concern about near-term pricing power or demand visibility. Sandisk, which focuses on flash storage, faces similar cyclical pressures. Investors watch these stocks closely because their performance tends to be a leading indicator for broader chip-sector sentiment.
The Nasdaq is heavily weighted toward technology names, which means a concentrated selloff in even a handful of large semiconductor stocks can move the whole index. That dynamic played out clearly on Tuesday, where the losses in memory chips overwhelmed gains elsewhere, including SpaceX's recovery.
What to Watch Next
The near-term focus will be on whether the weakness in Micron and Sandisk reflects company-specific concerns or a broader reset in chip-sector expectations. Any guidance updates, inventory commentary, or demand signals from either company will be closely tracked by the market. SpaceX's rebound suggests investor appetite for high-growth names remains present, but the session's direction was set by the semiconductor slide. Traders will also be watching whether the Nasdaq's dip attracts dip buyers or extends into further selling in the sessions ahead.