US software stocks tumble sparks concerns that AI trade is reshaping markets
By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK, Feb 9 (Reuters) - The software and services industry's recent plunge has ignited fears that the artificial intelligence boom may be reshaping markets in unexpected ways, raising questions about whether a rotation out of technology stocks signals trouble ahead for the AI trade.
Financial markets, juiced for months with investor enthusiasm about the artificial intelligence trade, got a rude awakening last week as software stocks around the globe sank on worries that fast-advancing AI tools could upend the industry.
While a rebound in the broader market helped soothe nerves on Friday, the outlook for U.S. software stocks, at the epicenter of the selloff, remained murky. Despite a 2% rebound on Friday, options market participants remained on high for further pain.
The selloff, which crossed continents knocking stocks from Europe to Asia, was triggered by a new legal tool from Anthropic's Claude large language model that raised existential questions about traditional software business models.
Investors are questioning whether the earnings-compounding nature of software companies would get disrupted, with strategists noting a broader rotation into value and cyclical-oriented sectors such as consumer staples, energy and industrials.
SOFTWARE SLUMP
Software and services stocks' underperformance against the S&P 500 has reached near-record proportions, with the sector lagging the benchmark by nearly 24 percentage points over the past three months, nearly the worst such gap in data going back three decades.
The downturn marks a stark reversal for the industry group that overall put up outsized gains for much of the post-pandemic era, when investors bet on digital transformation and cloud computing.
The current selloff rivals only a handful of periods since 1995, including the dot-com crash of 2000-2001, when the spread plunged below negative 25.
To be sure, historically, such extreme readings have sometimes preceded either capitulation selling or marked attractive entry points for contrarian investors, though the 2000-2001 period showed underperformance could persist for extended stretches.
SOFTWARE GLITCH
For now, the selloff has left many U.S. software stocks smarting from eye-watering losses since the S&P technology sector peaked in late October. Oracle is the loss leader, having shed nearly 50%, from October 29 to February 5, while ServiceNow and AppLovin each tumbled more than 40%. Gartner, Palantir, Intuit, Datadog, and Workday were also swept away in the selloff.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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