CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday that semiconductor stocks are making “revenge” trades after last week’s sharp decline. “I think what’s really happening today is revenge,” Kramer said on CNBC. “There’s a lot of people saying, ‘Look, it’s time to get back into the group. The group is taking a hit.'” The rebound follows a big sell-off in semiconductors late last week as investors moved away from the artificial intelligence winners that powered the market’s first-half rally. The iShares Semiconductor ETF, a basket of semiconductor stocks, fell 6.4% on Wednesday and 5.6% on Thursday (the market is closed on Friday). Kramer said he believed Thursday’s selling pressure was primarily driven by the Information’s reporting. The news outlet reported that Anthropic is considering developing custom artificial intelligence chips with Samsung Electronics, but Cramer hinted at concerns that big AI customers could become less reliant on traditional chip suppliers over time. On Thursday, Micron fell 5.5%, AMD fell 4.3% and Marvell Technology fell 9.8%. But by Monday, the buyers were back. Intel, Arm, and Broadcom are all up more than 3%. Cramer’s Charitable Trust, a portfolio managed by CNBC’s Investment Club, owns stakes in all three stocks. Kramer said Broadcom has more room to run after the company announced it would extend its partnership with Apple to develop and supply custom chips through 2031. Cramer said Apple is one of Broadcom’s largest customers, and this deal is an important long-term win for the company. Cramer has long liked Broadcom because it has been an essential design partner for custom chips for customers including Google. “This is a great little business that they’re doing, and they’re going to do it for Apple,” he said of Broadcom. Meanwhile, Nvidia, once a leader in the AI chip industry, has largely missed out on Monday’s resurgence following an industry investigation report on delays related to its next-generation Kyber rack-scale server system. The stock’s forward P/E ratio is less than 19 times, according to FactSet, and Cramer argued that the sell-off has been excessive. “NVIDIA has so many long knives,” he said. “At some point, you have to say, does it really deserve the same multiple as a chemical company? Could it have more upside value?”
