Intel (INTC -3.79%) stock lost ground in Wednesday's trading amid multiple bearish catalysts. The company's share price fell 3.2% in a daily session that saw the S&P 500 drop 1.2% and the Nasdaq Composite fall 2.1%.

Intel's valuation took a step back today as investors weighed China-related risk factors for semiconductor companies. Concerns about new tariffs on the automotive industry also prompted a pullback for the broader market.

Intel stock slumps on China concerns

Chip stocks got hit with significant pullbacks today as geopolitical risk factors came back into focus. The Trump administration added 80 new Chinese companies to its trade prohibition list, and businesses now blocked from buying U.S. products include customers of Intel, Nvidia, and others.

Increasingly adversarial relations between the U.S. and China have been a recurring source of volatility for chip stocks in recent years. The foundation-level role that chips play in categories including artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity means that semiconductor technologies are a key competitive arena for the two world powers. Even though most of Intel's core operations are located in the U.S., geopolitical dynamics will continue to be a key valuation factor for the company and other chip players.

Intel was also pressured by tariff news today

New tariffs on foreign imports are scheduled to go into effect on April 2, and the market is trying to get a grasp on the breadth of the new import taxes. Comments from the Trump administration have given cause for shifting expectations. While President Trump's statements earlier this week suggested that his administration might take a narrower approach to the implementation of reciprocal tariffs on other countries, recent comments suggest that exceptions could be limited. Uncertainty on the tariff front could continue to spur volatility for Intel and other chip stocks in the near term.