Published February 13, 2026

AI and its huge demand for data center construction have driven U.S. stock markets the past couple of years. However investors have recently begun looking at the potential downside effects of AI. This has resulted in a massive sell off that began with the software sector and, in recent days, has radiated out into a wider swath of the market. In keeping with the AI disruption theme, we asked ChatGPT to write up this week’s article. We narrowed our prompt to only Wall Street Journal articles.
Here’s the result:
WSJ Summary: The AI Scare Trade
What it is
- The AI scare trade refers to investors selling stocks they think AI will disrupt, rather than buying AI beneficiaries.
- Fear—not earnings misses—is driving much of the move.
What WSJ says is happening
- Investor anxiety has shifted from “who wins from AI” to “who gets hurt by AI.”
- Markets are pricing in faster automation, fee compression, and job displacement across white-collar industries.
- This has caused sharp, sometimes indiscriminate selloffs, even in profitable, well-run companies.
Most affected sectors
- Software & IT services: Traditional software vendors seen as vulnerable to AI replacing parts of their products.
- Financial services: Wealth managers, brokers, and advisory firms hit on fears AI tools reduce demand for human advice.
- Real estate & professional services: Brokerages and service-heavy firms sold off on automation concerns.
Market impact
- AI fears have:
- Broken market rallies
- Increased volatility
- Lowered risk appetite
- WSJ notes this has contributed to “edgy” markets, even when economic data is otherwise supportive.
Debate highlighted by WSJ
- Bearish view: AI disruption will happen faster than companies can adapt.
- Bullish view: Markets may be overreacting, creating selective buy-the-dip opportunities in high-quality firms that use AI rather than fight it.
Bottom line
- The AI scare trade is broad, fear-driven, and expanding beyond tech.
- WSJ frames it as a rotation based on perceived disruption risk, not a collapse in AI optimism itself.
Whether it lasts depends on earnings guidance and how convincingly companies show they can deploy AI to boost margins instead of eroding them.
Market Update
Stocks kicked off the week with gains as investors added on to the prior Friday’s rebound. The Nasdaq bounced up +0.9% with Oracle attempting to recover from intense selling pressure over the prior weeks. Japanese stocks surged +3% on the decisive election showing by Prime Minister Takaichi. She’s attracted investors with her ambitious pro-growth plans. A flat retail sales report and the spread of AI disruption to the financial sector sent stocks -0.3% lower Tuesday. Those same issues were at play Wednesday though indexes closed unchanged. A labor report came in better than expected to support stocks. Investors ramped up AI concerns again Thursday pummeling a wide range of stocks with trucking stocks the latest sector to be attacked by the AI scare trade. The Nasdaq fell 2% in Thursday’s session. After the bell, a strong earnings report from semiconductor equipment maker Applied Materials coupled with a benign inflation report Friday morning brought buyers back into the market. By day’s end though stocks had largely given up modest gains to close flat.
Stocks continue to struggle against overhead resistance. The S&P 500 fell -1.28% this week while the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) slipped -1.27%. Small cap stocks posted a modest -0.78% setback.
Warm wishes and until next week.