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Thursday June 18, 2026  •  Two Engines, Opposite Signs

Intel Soars, Chips Hit Records, Gold Sinks

A day after Warsh's hawkish Fed, the dollar hit an 11-week high and gold fell 3%, the rate channel working as advertised. But the chips ripped to records on their own catalysts: Intel up 10.6% on a Trump-Apple chip deal, Micron to a record 1,134 on the memory shortage. The Fed sets the price of money, not the price of chips.

INTC 133.99 +10.6%  ·  MU 1133.99 +8.7%  ·  SMH 659.88 +5.8%  ·  QQQ 740.62 +2.5%  ·  DXY 100.82 +0.7%  ·  GC=F 4227.90 −3.0%  ·  SPCX 185.00 −3.6%  ·  VIX 16.40 −11%
Two Engines, Opposite Signs
One-day returns: Intel, Micron, Marvell, the chip ETF, Broadcom and the Nasdaq green at the top, then the Dow, oil, gold and SpaceX red below.

The chips ripped to records while everything the Fed touches, the dollar aside, fell, gold, oil and the long-duration froth.

The chips ripped, and not on the Fed

The semiconductors led a broad rebound the day after the hawkish meeting. Intel jumped 10.6% to 133.99, Micron 8.7% to a record 1,134, Marvell 7.3%, the chip fund 5.8% to its own record, and the Nasdaq 100 rose 2.5%.

None of that was a bet that the Fed had softened. The catalysts were supply-side and idiosyncratic, a presidential post about Intel and a memory milestone out of Korea, the kind of news that re-rates chips regardless of the funds rate.

Intel soared on a Trump chip-deal post

Intel's 10.6% came from Truth Social. President Trump posted before the open that Apple had agreed to design and build chips with Intel on US soil, and that he had also steered Nvidia and Elon Musk's TeraFab toward Intel's foundry. Neither Apple nor Intel confirmed it, so the move was sentiment on a headline.

It landed on a primed name. BofA's Vivek Arya had double-upgraded Intel to Buy on June 11 with a 135 target, modeling foundry revenue from 1.1 billion this year to 47 billion by 2030. Intel's intraday high of 135.48 tagged that number almost exactly, the market pricing Arya's foundry thesis the instant Trump appeared to validate it.

Micron Sets A Record Above $1,100
Micron share price over six months rising from about 280 to a record 1,134, far above the dashed 1,000 line.

Micron closed at a record 1,134, up roughly fourfold in six months, ahead of its June 24 earnings.

Micron set a record on the memory shortage

Micron rose 8.7% to a record 1,134 after SK Hynix shipped 12-layer HBM4E memory samples ahead of schedule, a milestone that lifted the whole memory complex and sent Korea's index past 9,000 for the first time. The read-through to Micron was direct.

The level reflects a genuine scarcity. Micron's 2026 high-bandwidth memory is sold out, filling only 50 to 65% of demand, and UBS sits at a 1,625 target on memory prices it sees rising 50% a year. This is the supplier side of the AI trade that has now rallied through a jobs shock, an Oracle capex scare and a hawkish Fed inside two weeks.

The Hike Bet Jumped After Warsh
Prediction-market probabilities over six weeks: a 2026 hike spiking to 52% after the June 17 FOMC, the cut-by-2027 line collapsing to 22%, recession drifting to 11%.

A day after the hawkish dots, the 2026-hike bet jumped to 52%, cut odds collapsed to 22%, and recession bets fell to 11%.

The rate channel, meanwhile, worked perfectly

Everywhere except the chips, the hawkish Fed was loud and clear. The probability of a 2026 rate hike jumped to 52% from 36% the day before, the highest in six weeks, while the odds of a cut by 2027 collapsed to 22% and recession bets fell to 11%.

The dollar agreed, grinding to an 11-week high at 100.82, and the 2-year yield held the 16-basis-point spike it took on decision day, the biggest Fed-day jump since 2008. The curve bear-flattened, the front end up on hike risk and the long end down, the shape a Fed gets when the market believes it will lean on growth to hold the line.

Gold and the froth show what the Fed can reach

Gold fell 3% to 4,228, down 123 dollars in two sessions, its entire bull case, falling real rates and a weak dollar, turned upside down, with the Iran deal pulling the geopolitical bid out at the same time. SpaceX fell another 3.6% to 185 and the speculative long-duration names kept rolling over.

That is the rate channel doing its job. Higher-for-longer drains the assets whose value sits furthest in the future, gold, unprofitable growth, a fresh IPO, while it cannot touch a company that is sold out of a product the world cannot get enough of.

One caution sat under the euphoria

Accenture, the AI-services bellwether, fell after reporting. Revenue grew 6% and management called demand for AI reinvention strong, but new bookings of 19.3 billion came in below last year's 19.7 billion and the guidance disappointed.

It is a small dissonance worth marking. The companies selling the picks and shovels of AI are sold out, while the consultant being paid to implement it just missed on bookings, the first hint that demand for the buildout and demand for its output may not be the same line.

A day after Warsh's hawkish Fed, two engines ran in opposite directions. The rate channel worked exactly as designed, the dollar at an 11-week high, gold down 3%, the 2026-hike bet jumping to 52%, and the long-duration froth like SpaceX still deflating. But the chips ripped to records, Intel 10.6% on a Trump-Apple deal, Micron to 1,134 on a memory shortage that is sold out for the year. The Fed sets the price of money and it is clearly raising it, draining gold and froth and duration. It does not set the price of chips, which a real shortage re-rates no matter what the funds rate does. The one caution is Accenture, the AI consultant that missed on bookings while the chip makers sold out, the first crack between demand for the buildout and demand for what it produces.
END
eli terminal  •  Thursday June 18, 2026