Big Tech Pain Is Mounting as Risk-Wary Traders Dump Winners

For some time now, there have been plenty of reasons to worry about Big Tech stocks. Stretched valuations after a big run up, heavy spending on artificial intelligence and lofty expectations for future growth. For months, though, none of it seemed to matter.

Something changed in the past week, however. The so-called Magnificent Seven stocks are sliding. A Bloomberg Index tracking the cohort is down 12% off its peak, falling into correction territory after it powered the Nasdaq 100 to a record on Feb. 19. Of the seven, only Meta Platforms Inc. is in the green for this year.

The index fell 0.8% on Monday.

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It’s not because any of the longer-standing concerns have gotten significantly worse. Combined profits for the group actually came in better than expected in the fourth quarter. Instead, the main culprit is a darkening economic outlook. Growth is looking shaky, inflation appears entrenched and trade policy increasingly dicey. The response from investors has been to sell the winners and ask questions later.

“The earnings weren’t terrible by any means, but there’s little patience and a lot of frustration,” said Jordan Klein, a tech-sector specialist at Mizuho Securities. “People are nervous.”

Klein noted a string of disappointing economic data — on inflation, consumer confidence, and retail sales — along with tariff risk that has recently been thrown into sharp relief. In the face of that kind of backdrop, especially when coupled with multiples that often remain elevated by historical standards, anything that isn’t a blowout is a disappointment.