ORLANDO, Florida, Nov 18 (Reuters) - Warnings about Wall
Street's excessive optimism, concentration risk, and frothy
valuations have fallen on deaf ears for most of this year,
leaving market-watchers wondering what, if anything, will cool
the tech and artificial intelligence frenzy.
It turns out that it could end up being a plain
old-fashioned shift in the interest rate outlook.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq, buoyed by strong earnings and AI
capex investment, have notched dozens of record highs this year,
a remarkable feat given the uncertainty and poor visibility that
have characterized the economic and policy landscape in 2025.
But both indices peaked on October 29, the day the Federal
Reserve cut interest rates for a second consecutive meeting.
Crucially, however, Chair Jerome Powell said afterwards that a
third cut in December was not the "forgone conclusion" markets
had seemingly thought it would be. "Far from it," he emphasized.
In the three weeks since, the line of Fed officials
expressing their reluctance to ease policy again next month has
lengthened.
The resulting shift in market-based rate expectations has
been dramatic.
The probability of a December rate cut fell as low as 40% on
Monday, according to rates futures markets, compared with over
90% before the Fed's October 28-29 policy meeting. The next
quarter-point rate cut isn't fully priced in until March.
Many risk assets have responded in kind.
While the benchmark S&P 500 may only be down 3% since
October 29, a lot of tech and AI bellwethers have been hit
harder, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index's losses
approaching 10%. Bitcoin, a reasonable proxy for wider risk
appetite and speculative investment activity, is down 20%.
ALL EYES ON NVIDIA
There's often no obvious trigger for market corrections or
reversals, and they are typically long in the making.
For example, former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan's famous
"irrational exuberance" comment about the 1990s dotcom euphoria
was in December 1996, but the bubble didn't burst until March
2000.
There's no suggestion that a repeat of the dotcom bust is
unfolding now, but it does look like some air is coming out of
today's inflated markets. And the Fed's hawkish steer seems to
be a major catalyst, with many of the rate-sensitive AI and tech
names that powered the boom earlier in the year now leading this
mini swoon.
That's in line with long-held market thinking. When firms
are expected to generate strong cash flows in the future -
whether they be well-established megacaps or smaller startups -
a sudden swerve in the path for monetary policy can alter
perceptions of their current stock valuations quite
substantially.
Look no further than chipmaker Nvidia, which recently became
the world's first $5 trillion company - on October 29, no less -
but has since seen its share price fall 10%.
Some of Wall Street's largest hedge funds have recently
reduced exposure to this AI leader and other U.S. megacaps.
Japan's Softbank said last week it had sold all its Nvidia
shares for $5.8 billion, and tech billionaire Peter Thiel's
hedge fund also disposed of its entire Nvidia stake in the third
quarter.
The AI poster child releases its latest quarterly earnings
after the market close on Wednesday. With the Fed seemingly
about to put rate cuts on pause, the bar for another Nvidia
results-led market jump may be high.
That's a reminder that even though many accepted market and
economic rules have been thrown into doubt this year, the
standard playbook hasn't been ripped up completely.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters)
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