Investing.com — stock fell 7.3% in morning trading today, trading at $1,013.85, as a violent global selloff in memory and storage chip names swept across markets following a near-10% collapse in South Korea’s index — its worst single-day drop in months — which triggered double circuit breakers and sent sector sentiment into a tailspin. The rout was centered on South Korean chip giants and , both of which plunged over 12%, stoking widespread concern that the AI-fueled memory and storage rally had become dangerously overstretched.
Adding a company-specific layer of pressure, Fox Advisors downgraded Seagate from Outperform to Equal-Weight on the prior session, leaving the stock with 20 buy ratings, 3 hold ratings, and 1 sell rating. The downgrade arrived at a sensitive moment, as valuation concerns had already been mounting — Investing Pro’s fair value estimate sits well below the stock’s recent trading range — and a pattern of insider selling in recent weeks had kept a cautious undercurrent in the market.
The broader market offered no shelter today, with the declining 2.1% and the shedding 1.5% during the session, as the Asian chip rout cascaded through European and then U.S. markets. Seagate’s direct storage peers were similarly punished, with SanDisk and each dropping sharply in early trading, underscoring that the move was a sector-wide repricing of AI infrastructure risk rather than an isolated event. Investors were also bracing for Micron’s earnings release scheduled for the following session, adding to pre-event uncertainty across the group.
The combination of a sector-wide derating triggered by the South Korean market shock, a fresh analyst downgrade removing a key bullish voice, and a high-valuation stock operating in a risk-off environment created the conditions for today’s outsized decline — even as Seagate’s underlying AI storage demand narrative remains intact heading into its next earnings report.
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