It's Tuesday, 1:45 p.m., and do you know where the Nasdaq is?
It's down 0.65% -- but that's not a patch on the damage being done today to the Direxion Daily Semiconductor Bull 3X Shares ETF (SOXL 11.67%), which crashed 14% this afternoon.
And Samsung is to blame.
Image source: Getty Images.
Korea sends the semi market South
South Korean technology giant Samsung reported Q2 2026 earnings last night. Sales climbed 28% sequentially and more than doubled year over year. Operating profit surged many times over, to $58.4 billion.
And yet Samsung stock sold off 7% today. Why?
Korea's semiconductor giant beat analyst forecasts, but in a quirk of this artificial intelligence-fueled stock market, Samsung failed to beat investor expectations, which were for even higher numbers. This triggered a "buy the rumor, sell the news" phenomenon, with investors selling Samsung despite its good news, including confirmation that computer memory prices are still rising and that its profits are continuing to climb.

NYSEMKT: SOXL
Key Data Points
3x the risk, 3x the pain
So how did this affect the Direxion Daily Semiconductor Bull 3X ETF? Well, the first thing you need to know is that Samsung isn't a component of this ETF, so logically, Samsung's 7% price decline shouldn't have affected it much at all.
And yet it did.
Worries over Samsung's failure to wow the market sparked a sell-off among other semiconductor stocks that are components of the ETF -- names like Nvidia (NVDA 2.49%), Micron (MU 4.58%), and Intel (INTC 3.74%), all of which are among the ETF's top 10 holdings.
Worse, Direxion's strategy of magnifying stock price movements 3x meant the Daily Semiconductor Bull 3X ETF suffered far greater losses than its components.
And that's how a 7% sell-off in one stock in Korea created a 14% loss here in the U.S. of A.



