S&P 500: Market volatility widens as AI concerns trigger a valuation reset, says Deutsche Bank.

Analysts at Deutsche Bank say mounting concerns about artificial intelligence have sparked a dramatic repricing in global equities, wiping out more than $1 trillion in market value and spreading volatility far beyond the technology sector. They note that softer U.S. economic data and mixed growth signals also contributed to a strong rally in Treasuries and weekly declines in the S&P 500.

AI fears deepen and broaden the sell-off

Over the past two weeks, markets have erased well over $1 trillion in global equity value amid worries that AI could fundamentally alter business models and squeeze profit margins across industries ranging from software and legal services to IT consulting, wealth management, logistics, insurance, real estate brokerage, and commercial property.

What began as tech-driven volatility earlier in the month evolved into a more indiscriminate market downturn last week. The low point came on Thursday with a sharp drop in software stocks, but losses were widespread. Companies in wealth management, real estate, and financials posted double-digit declines, highlighting the breadth of the pullback.

Market breadth reflected the shift: the equal-weighted S&P 500 fell 1.37% on Thursday before ending the week up 0.29% (including a 1.04% gain on Friday). Overall, major U.S. indices closed the week weaker, with the S&P 500 down 1.39%, the Nasdaq Composite off 2.10%, and the “Magnificent 7” sliding 3.24%.

While AI-related fears dominated sentiment, a busy run of U.S. economic data also influenced markets. Early-week releases—including flat December retail sales, a softer fourth-quarter Employment Cost Index, and downgraded Q4 growth estimates from the Atlanta Fed—helped drive Treasury yields lower across the curve.

Sources: Fxstreet

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