For weeks, it felt like the market could only go one direction and that was up. The AI trade was unstoppable, tech stocks were printing new highs, and investors were conditioned to buy every dip.Today delivered a reality check that Wall Street hasn’t seen in a while.
The cracks started forming beneath the surface. Even as the Dow Jones Industrial Average pushed to fresh record highs up nearly 900 points in one session there was already a divergence building. Tech, the engine of this rally, was quietly losing steam. Semiconductor stocks, the backbone of the AI boom, began to roll over. That mattered more than most people realized. A stronger than expected jobs report hit the market like a hammer. On the surface, good economic news should be bullish. In today’s environment, strong labor data means one thing higher interest rates for longer.
Suddenly, the narrative flipped. Instead of rate cuts fueling the next leg higher, investors were forced to confront the possibility of tightening continuing into the end of the year. The QQQ dropped over 4.8% in a single session, its worst decline in more than a year. The S&P 500 fell more than 2.5%, snapping a nine week winning streak. Even the broader market, which had been holding up relatively well, couldn’t escape the selloff.
This isn’t necessarily the end of the bull market. It is likely the end of easy money in tech, for now. The market just went through its first real stress test after a historic run, and it failed in the exact place it was most vulnerable in over concentrated overvalued growth. If you’ve been riding the AI wave, I hope you got off yesterday like myself.