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AI scare trade broadens out as we wait for key inflation update

  • Mood shifts for markets as AI scare trade dominates.
  • Sell off spills over into Asian markets.
  • US software sector is trading at its cheapest level since 2022.
  • AI trade splits between winners and losers.
  • Europe is a harbour in the storm for now.
  • CPI risks loom.

Markets are nervous as we end the week. Stocks sold off sharply during the US session on Thursday, the Nasdaq fell more than 2%. The main US indices are now posting YTD losses and the Nasdaq crossed some important technical barriers, including the 50-day and 100-day moving averages, which confirms that momentum is to the downside. Both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are underwater for the year so far, as the AI Scare trade continues to grip markets.

The sell off in US stocks is spilling over into global equities and the MSCI World Index is set to have its first  back-to-back weeks of losses for 2026. Stocks in Asia followed the US lower on  Friday, although European stock market futures are pointing to a slightly higher open for the Dax and the FTSE 100 today, as Europe catches a bid. We assume that sentiment will be fragile as we end the week, and futures markets are pointing to a continuation of the selloff in the US later today.

The AI scare trade is back

The AI scare trade continues to dominate markets, and as new AI tools are introduced, the ripple effects are widening. For example, silver and gold prices plunged on Thursday, as precious metals continue to move with stocks and broader risk sentiment. Gold and silver are both staging a recovery this morning, however they have not recouped the losses after Thursday’s plunge.

Bitcoin is also higher today, although it remains close to the lows of the week. Bitcoin is worth watching due to the link between crypto and AI stocks. Capital has poured into crypto and AI-linked stocks in recent months and years, and there has been some overlap, which is why they are moving together in 2026.

There could be a new stage in the stock market sell off as the AI disruption trade broadens out. For most of 2026, the narrative has been about the rotation out of US tech stocks and into value-linked sectors of the US market. However, that was not the case on Thursday, when the equal-weighted S&P 500 fell at the same time as the market-cap weighted S&P 500, which is heavily influenced by the tech sector.  

AI trade splits between winners and losers

The worst performing stock on the US market was Applovin, which dropped nearly 20% yesterday. Dell and Cisco were also in the cross hairs of the sell off, as the S&P 500’s software sector falls to its cheapest valuation since 2022. The AI theme is unpredictable and leading to a sea change in market sentiment. For example, the top performers on Thursday included Sandisk the memory chip maker, and Equinix, which runs a worldwide network of data centres. AI is coming, and there is demand for companies linked to the development of AI, however, the effects of the new technology are having a hugely disruptive effect on markets as we move through February.

Europe is a harbour in the storm

Interestingly, Europe’s lack of tech exposure is lending it some immunity to the recent sell off in the US. For example, the FTSE 100 is up 4% YTD, while the Nasdaq is lower by 2.7%. However, if the move away from tech leads to a broader de-risking, then European outperformance may not last long.

CPI risks loom

Elsewhere, the focus is on the dollar, as the FX market attracts haven flows. We also get the US CPI report later today. The market expects headline and core CPI to moderate to a 2.5% annual rate, however, in the current environment, signs that inflation pressures are building in the US and rate cuts may not be forthcoming could knock sentiment towards stocks and other risky assets even more.

The Nasdaq composite index

Chart

Source: XTB and Bloomberg 

Author

Kathleen Brooks

Kathleen has nearly 15 years’ experience working with some of the leading retail trading and investment companies in the City of London.

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