The U.S. consumer price index rose 3.8% year-over-year in April, combining with a proposed South Korean tax on artificial intelligence profits to prompt a rotation out of semiconductor and momentum equities. Capital rotated into defensive and energy sectors, pushing the Beta factor down -1.38% (z=-1.26). Despite the decline in technology stocks, the residual Growth factor returned +0.30% (z=1.27), indicating a specific reduction in AI infrastructure exposure rather than a broader duration sell-off.
Factor
Return
Z-Score
Category
Direction
Short Sale
-0.35%
-2.27
Dynamics
Shorts Underperform
MedTermTrend
-0.60%
-1.42
Style
Trends Reverse
Semis
-0.64%
-1.27
Theme
Semis Underperform
Beta
-1.38%
-1.26
Style
Defensives Outperform
Growth
+0.30%
1.27
Style
Growth Outperforms
April CPI accelerated to 3.8% year-over-year, exceeding consensus and reducing 2026 rate cut expectations.[1] Concurrently, a proposal from South Korean Presidential Policy Chief Kim Yong-beom to fund a "national dividend" using excess tax revenue from AI semiconductor profits weighed on the global technology supply chain.[2] A planned 18-day general strike at Samsung Electronics further pressured Asian equities.[3]
The iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY) fell -7.06% on 2.1× typical volume, reversing its 20-day trend. This weakness extended to U.S. equities via the Semis factor (-0.64%, z=-1.27) and the MedTermTrend factor (-0.60%, z=-1.42). The SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (SMH) declined -2.68%, trading at 2.2× average volume.
ETF
Theme
Today
1d Ago
5d Ago
20d Ago
EWY
south korea
-7.06%
+1.39%
+17.89%
+36.55%
SMH
semiconductors
-2.68%
+1.72%
+13.72%
+29.99%
MTUM
momentum
-1.14%
+1.61%
+7.87%
+15.26%
DIA
mega cap
+0.19%
+0.20%
+1.54%
+3.11%
XLV
healthcare
+1.91%
-0.31%
-1.17%
-3.33%
USO
oil
+4.04%
+3.80%
-6.06%
+7.93%
At the single-stock level, Qualcomm (QCOM) fell -12.14%, Intel (INTC) declined -7.63%, and Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) dropped -4.01%, with TSM retracing 30% of its daily move in the final hour of trading.[5] The declines in MedTermTrend and Semis pulled the broader Beta factor to a -1.38% (z=-1.26) return as capital rotated from cyclical to defensive equities.
Defensive and Energy Rotation
Capital rotated from high-beta technology into sectors offering inflation protection and defensive characteristics. A breakdown in U.S.-Iran ceasefire negotiations closed the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping, pushing Brent crude above $107 per barrel.[4] The energy price increase supported the USO ETF (+4.04%) and the Energy sector (+0.89%).
Health Care (+1.36%) and Consumer Staples (+0.72%) outperformed the broader market. Philip Morris (PM) rose +4.30%, with 25% of the return occurring in the final 60 minutes on 1.1× average volume. The DIA ETF, weighted toward mature value components, traded at 1.7× typical volume and gained +0.19%.
Growth Factor Performance
Despite the 3.8% CPI print and subsequent long-duration asset sell-off, the Growth factor did not decline alongside Momentum and Beta. On a residualized basis, Growth was the top-performing style factor (+0.30%, z=1.27).
The underperformance within the Growth factor (down -2.92% for the bottom quintile) was concentrated in artificial intelligence, data-center proxies (JOBY, RGTI, CRSP), and semiconductors. The sell-off targeted specific segments affected by the Kospi decline and hardware valuations. Companies with organic growth independent of the AI theme maintained positive returns, indicating a reduction in concentration risk rather than a complete exit from the growth style.
Economic Context
Consumer Price Index: April CPI rose 3.8% annually, exceeding the 3.7% consensus, driven by a 3.8% monthly increase in energy costs and continued shelter inflation.[1] The data reduced near-term rate cut expectations and contributed to the intraday rotation out of high-beta equities.
Consumer Credit Panel: Total US household debt reached a record $18.8 trillion in Q1 2026, though aggregate delinquency rates remained stable at 4.8%.[6] The lack of severe credit deterioration provided a modest fundamental floor for defensive consumer sectors amid the broader volatility.
This document is generated by an AI assistant for informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, an investment recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Data is based on proprietary models and recent market information, which may be incomplete or subject to change. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.