A global tech stock sell-off worsened as investor caution grew over the AI frenzy and its soaring costs. The Nasdaq, S&P 500, and Asian markets like KOSPI and Nikkei plunged, with chipmakers like Micron and Samsung hit hard.
The sell-off in global tech stocks intensified on Tuesday as investors became wary of the frenzy around AI, adopting a more cautious approach and evaluating the next steps on how to navigate the technology’s soaring costs. Nasdaq 100 extended the selloff opening more than 2 per cent lower on Tuesday, with memory chip heavyweight Micron down more than 11 per cent. The S&P 500 fell 1.6 per cent while the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped around 0.7 per cent as investors weighed concerns around rising AI costs along with a hawkish US Fed.
Rout Spreads to Asia, SpaceX Tumbles
The tech rout that started on Monday from Wall Street engulfed the Asian markets on Tuesday, with Korea’s benchmark KOSPI sliding nearly 10 per cent and Japan’s Nikkei down 3.5 per cent. Korean semiconductor heavyweights SK Hynix and Samsung tanked more than 12 per cent as the AI momentum that took these shares to stratospheric heights lost steam.
SpaceX shares continued their downward journey on Tuesday, falling around 1.5 per cent and briefly going below the USD150 mark at which the rocket-to-AI company had listed around two weeks ago. That led to its market valuation slipping below the USD2 trillion market capitalisation. The stock had tanked 16 per cent on Monday. The Elon Musk-led company, which made a spectacular debut on Nasdaq, is going to tap the bond markets to raise more money as it plans to take the AI battle to space.
AI Costs and Hawkish Fed Fuel Concerns
Rising AI cost has emerged as the top concern among investors, with many corporate entities reporting the cash-guzzling nature of the AI models and rising demand for memory chips creating a shortage, leading to rising prices. Coupled with the massive spending on developing the compute infrastructure needed to train the AI models, the risks around the entire AI boom have risen. Hyperscalers like Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft have committed hundreds of billions of dollars to expand the data centre capacities.
Investors are also weighing possibilities of at least two rate hikes by the US Fed this year as the Kevin Warsh-led central bank delivered a hawkish commentary in the June policy review. Investors will closely watch a key inflation gauge this week to assess the Fed’s likely move.
Energy Markets Add to Uncertainty
Investors will also keep an eye on the energy markets as the US government waived sanctions on Iranian oil and petrochemical exports on Monday. Even though a peace agreement is in place between the US and Iran with talks for a more durable accord underway, and the critical Strait of Hormuz now open, the already high inflation and risks of second-round effects are likely to persist.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)