Despite tumbling tech stocks dragging down major indexes, some market strategists see the current rout as a positive development. Stephen Parker of JPMorgan Private Bank told CNBC that the volatility reflects a “healthy” adjustment, as investors rotate away from Big Tech dominance and toward other sectors. This perspective suggests that the sell-off may be less about weakness and more about balancing market leadership.
At the index level, performance remains muted. The S&P 500 is up less than 1% year-to-date after a choppy January, while the Nasdaq Composite has slipped 1.5% in 2026 following consecutive sharp declines. For investors, this underscores the tension between short-term pain in tech stocks and long-term opportunities in diversified market growth.
Tech stocks have powered much of the bull market since late 2022, but growing unease over artificial intelligence’s disruptive potential and concerns about overvalued valuations have shifted momentum.
This year, value stocks and defensive sectors are gaining traction as investors reassess risk, signaling a broader rotation in market leadership.
Tech stocks remain the weakest performers in the S&P 500 this year, down about 5%, as investor concerns over AI disruption weigh on software companies despite gains for memory chip and storage device makers. Meanwhile, energy and consumer staples have surged double digits since the start of 2026, signaling the long-anticipated shift in market leadership is finally taking hold. Analysts highlight this rotation as a broadening of the recovery story, reducing concentration risk that has plagued indexes dominated by Big Tech.
Bank of America data shows clients have poured record amounts into consumer staples over the past month, marking the strongest inflows since 2008. At the same time, tech stocks have faced consistent selling pressure, with net outflows in four of the past five weeks. Despite this rotation, the Magnificent Seven continue to show exceptional growth, now accounting for a record 27.8% of S&P 500 earnings, underscoring their outsized influence even as market leadership diversifies.
Signs of a market shift are emerging, with 90% of large-cap value companies beating fourth-quarter earnings estimates. Growth outside of the tech sector has accelerated, leaving Big Tech stocks less dominant. The premium investors pay for the Magnificent Seven has narrowed from 8% late last year to 6.3% today, still above the long-term average but suggesting room for multiples to compress. Alphabet and Amazon’s upcoming earnings will be critical in gauging whether Wall Street’s appetite for tech remains strong, especially after Meta and Microsoft’s reports showed investors are setting a high bar.
Experts highlight that defensive sectors like consumer staples and industrials are positioned to benefit, with Bank of America analysts noting staples remain underweight in active funds. Policy moves from Washington aimed at affordability could further support these sectors. Still, analysts caution against dismissing growth stocks entirely, as investors may return to paying premiums for fast-growing tech names if economic growth slows later in the year.
The sharp decline in tech stocks, down 5% in the S&P 500 this year, reflects investor unease over AI disruption and stretched valuations. Meanwhile, energy and consumer staples have surged double digits, confirming a long-anticipated sector rotation. Analysts say this broadening of market leadership reduces concentration risk and strengthens the recovery narrative, even as Big Tech earnings remain influential.