Tech Stocks Slide After Oracle Reignites AI Fears: Markets Wrap
(Bloomberg) — US stocks fell after concerns over Oracle Corp.’s plans for vast capital outlays on artificial-intelligence infrastructure drove a broad retreat from risky assets.
The S&P 500 slipped while the Nasdaq 100 fell more than 1%, the biggest drop for the tech-heavy gauge since late November. Oracle, viewed as a bellwether of the AI investment boom, sank as much as 16% after cloud sales missed estimates and the company lifted its 2026 capital spending outlook by $15 billion to $50 billion.
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Caution toward AI heavyweights persisted, with Nvidia Corp. down around 3% amid Magnificent Seven losses. Bitcoin fell more than 2% toward $90,000. The dollar ticked lower.
Oracle’s results pushed worries about tech valuations and whether heavy spending on AI infrastructure will pay off back into focus, reviving concerns that fueled weeks of volatility in November. While the sector has powered the S&P 500’s stunning rally this year, spending fears have prompted some investors to rotate into other areas as the US economic outlook remains robust.
“Markets have grown far more wary of AI-related spending, which is a sharp contrast with mid-2025 when anything hinting at higher capex sparked excitement,” said Susana Cruz, a strategist at Panmure Liberum. “Oracle has been the weakest link in all this, largely because it’s funding a big chunk of its investment with debt.”
Traders will get another read on the strength of the AI trade when Broadcom Inc. reports after the close. The stock has surged more than doubled from its April low, and Bloomberg Intelligence expects results that are in line with, or slightly above, estimates as hyperscaler customers continue to ramp up spending.
Oracle’s earnings landed after the S&P 500 closed just shy of a record on Wednesday, lifted by a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut and Chair Jerome Powell’s sanguine economic outlook.
Investors had taken comfort in Fed policymakers leaving the door open to more easing next year, even though the quarter-point cut drew three dissents. Traders stuck to bets on two cuts in 2026, even as the Fed’s new projections signaled only one such move.
“The effect of Oracle has been greater than the Fed. This already tells us everything as we’ve been witnessing a strong concentration and one theme — AI — leading the market,” said Alberto Tocchio, a portfolio manager at Kairos Partners. “This doesn’t mean that AI is gone or it’s a bubble, but we need to focus on a wider scale.”
US Treasuries rallied after the rate cut was paired with the authorization of fresh bill purchases to rebuild bank reserves. The 10-year note held gains on Thursday after initial jobless claims rose more than expected in the Dec. 6 week, with the yield four basis points lower at 4.11%.
Powell suggested that the Fed had now acted sufficiently to help stabilize the labor market while leaving rates high enough to continue weighing on price pressures. Officials upgraded their median outlook for growth in 2026, to 2.3% from the 1.8% they projected in September. They also foresaw inflation declining to 2.4% next year, from the 2.6% in the previous projection.
“The Fed’s ‘hawkish-but-bullish’ cut last night reinforces this: stronger 2026 growth, faster disinflation,” said Florian Ielpo, head of macro at Lombard Odier Investment Managers. “Cuts are continuing, but they’re no longer automatic — and that’s usually a constructive backdrop for equities.”
In commodities, oil retreated tracking wider losses in risk assets. Silver extended an all-time high past $62 an ounce.
What Bloomberg Strategists say…
“The good news for equities, insofar as there is any, is that we may have crested the wave of peak rate hawkishness, at least for the time being. Fixed-income markets reacted to yesterday’s Fed and BOC meetings by pushing yields a little lower. A drip lower in global yields could provide a more reassuring backdrop for those corners of the equity market that aren’t directly tied to AI disappointment.”
—Cameron Crise, macro strategist, Markets Live. For the full analysis, click here.
Corporate News
Walt Disney Co. agreed to invest $1 billion in OpenAI and license characters from Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars for use on the Sora generative video platform. A next-generation obesity shot from Eli Lilly & Co. helped patients lose almost a quarter of their body weight, potentially making the experimental drug the most potent weight-loss medicine yet. The stock rose in premarket trading. Oracle Corp. shares fell in early trading after the company reported a jump in spending on AI data centers and other equipment, rising outlays that are taking longer to translate into cloud revenue than investors want. OpenAI and its investor Microsoft were sued over a Connecticut murder-suicide in the latest case to blame the popular ChatGPT chatbot for dangerous psychological manipulation of users. Novo Nordisk A/S shares have fallen so much this year that it’s almost as if the frenzy around weight-loss drugs that propelled the Danish pharmaceutical company’s meteoric rise never happened. Coca-Cola Co. said Chief Executive Officer James Quincey is stepping down and will be replaced at the end of March by Henrique Braun, the company’s chief operating officer. Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
The S&P 500 fell 0.3% as of 9:45 a.m. New York time The Nasdaq 100 fell 0.8% The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.7% The Stoxx Europe 600 rose 0.5% The MSCI World Index was little changed Currencies
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.3% The euro rose 0.4% to $1.1744 The British pound rose 0.3% to $1.3423 The Japanese yen rose 0.6% to 155.10 per dollar Cryptocurrencies
Bitcoin fell 2.2% to $90,338.35 Ether fell 4.5% to $3,191.23 Bonds
The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined four basis points to 4.11% Germany’s 10-year yield declined one basis point to 2.84% Britain’s 10-year yield declined four basis points to 4.47% Commodities
West Texas Intermediate crude fell 1.9% to $57.34 a barrel Spot gold rose 0.3% to $4,243.58 an ounce This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from Neil Campling and Sagarika Jaisinghani.
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