Nasdaq Sinks, S&P 500 Falls as AI Fears Rock Tech Stocks
The Nasdaq fell to lead stocks on Wall Street on Monday as Chinese startups lost confidence in American leadership and profitability in AI.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) fell 3%, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell 1.7%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell 0.2% on the heels of a winning week for major measures.
China’s DeepSeek AI assistant uses cheaper chips and less data than flagship models, but markets are buzzing with claims that it works just as well. DeepSeek’s rise in popularity has prompted investors to reassess bets that AI-driven demand-driven growth will deliver more gains for stocks.
AI bellwether Nvidia’s shares fell 11% as chip-related names suffered. ASML ( ASML ) was off nearly 8%, while Broadcom ( AVGO ) and Micron Technology ( MU ) were hammered.
Shares of Microsoft ( MSFT ) fell more than 3 percent amid the megacaps’ massive investment in AI ventures. Google’s parent Alphabet ( GOOG , GOOGL ), Meta ( Meta ) and Amazon ( AMZN ) lost ground as the technology sold.
Big tech earnings season kicks off this week, highlighted by results from Apple (AAPL), Tesla, Meta and Microsoft. Eyes become a guide to future profits as DeepSeek raises questions about revenue prospects.
As stocks fell, investors began flocking to safe-haven assets. The 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX) fell as much as 12 basis points to 4.50%, its lowest level in a month, while haven currencies including the yen and Swiss franc rose.
In the background, fears of a trade war were fueled by the conflict between President Donald Trump and Colombia over the weekend. Trump threatened to slap a series of 25% tariffs on the country’s goods after a deal was struck, before pausing the deal.
The debate underscored concerns that Trump will not shy away from turning to tariffs to advance various policy goals.
The Federal Reserve will hold its first policy meeting of 2025 this week, with officials expecting rapid-fire moves by Trump that could pose a challenge to the central bank. The president has called for the Fed to cut interest rates, a sign that he is at odds with policymakers who begin their two-day meeting on Tuesday.
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