TLDR
- Qnity (Q) stock fell around 7.9%–8.3% on Thursday, March 12, 2026
- The drop was linked to rising oil prices and higher interest rates, not company-specific news
- Brent crude rose 10% to over $101 a barrel; the 10-year Treasury yield hit 4.27%
- Qnity actually beat Q4 earnings estimates — $0.82 EPS vs $0.64 expected
- Analyst consensus remains “Buy” with an average price target of $120.86
Qnity Electronics (Q) stock dropped sharply on Thursday, falling as much as 8.3% intraday to around $106.58, after opening from a prior close of $116.27. At its low, the stock touched $105.41. Volume came in at roughly 1.66 million — down 36% from the average daily volume of around 2.6 million.
Qnity Electronics, Inc., Q
The selloff had little to do with Qnity itself. There was no company-specific news, no earnings miss, and no major analyst downgrades. The stock was caught up in a broader wave of selling across semiconductor names.
Peer Entegris fell 5.4%, Intel dropped 5.7%, and ASML lost 2.5%. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones fell 1.5% and 1.6% respectively. Semiconductor stocks were among the hardest-hit sectors of the day.
The main culprit: oil and interest rates. Brent crude surged 10% to over $101 a barrel amid ongoing fighting in Iran, stoking fears of a return to higher inflation. The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4.27%, up about 0.3 percentage points since the conflict began.
For semiconductor companies, rising rates are a real headwind. Building chip-making fabs is expensive and takes years. Higher borrowing costs slow that investment cycle and weigh on valuations. Adrian Helfert, CIO of Multi Asset Strategies at Westwood, notes that the semi industry is particularly rate-sensitive because of how capital-intensive and long-cycle the business is.
It wasn’t just chips. Mining stocks also took a hit — Freeport-McMoRan fell 3.8% with copper down 1.1%, and Caterpillar lost 1%. Any capital-heavy, cyclical business faces the same pressure when rates move.

Earnings Beat Not Enough to Hold the Stock
The irony is that Qnity’s own fundamentals look solid. The company — spun out from DuPont de Nemours in late 2025 — reported Q4 earnings of $0.82 per share, well ahead of the $0.64 consensus estimate. Revenue came in at $1.19 billion, topping expectations of $1.15 billion. That’s 8.1% revenue growth year over year.
For fiscal 2026, Qnity set guidance of $3.55–$3.95 EPS.
On the day of the selloff, the stock’s 50-day moving average sat at $103.79. The company carries a P/E of 58.18 and a market cap of around $22.35 billion.
Analysts Still Positive
Despite the drop, the analyst community hasn’t pulled back. KeyCorp lifted its price target on Qnity from $117 to $147, rating the stock “overweight.” Royal Bank of Canada raised its target from $118 to $133 with an “outperform” rating. Mizuho set a $120 target.
The consensus remains a “Buy” with an average price target of $120.86 — above where the stock was trading after the decline.
Several institutional investors also added new positions in Q during Q4 2025, including Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo, Dunhill Financial, and Armstrong Advisory Group.
As of Thursday’s close, Qnity stock was trading at approximately $106.58, down roughly 8.3% on the session.
