{"id":84788,"date":"2026-02-11T08:23:28","date_gmt":"2026-02-11T11:23:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tech.einnews.com\/article\/891356086"},"modified":"2026-02-11T08:23:28","modified_gmt":"2026-02-11T11:23:28","slug":"big-techs-ai-spending-spooks-investorsa","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/2026\/02\/11\/big-techs-ai-spending-spooks-investorsa\/","title":{"rendered":"Big Tech&#8217;s AI Spending Spooks Investors\u00c2\u00a0"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">The <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newsweek.com\/topic\/stock-market\">stock market<\/a> has begun killing its darlings, sliding into a brutal selloff that has rippled across the technology sector. Nvidia, the chipmaker synonymous with the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newsweek.com\/topic\/ai\">AI<\/a> boom, has shed around 17 percent of its value since its October high and hit a year-to-date low on February 5. Enterprise software <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newsweek.com\/topic\/stocks\">stocks<\/a> have lost&nbsp;roughly&nbsp;$1 trillion&nbsp;in market capitalization since late January, while in early February the Nasdaq was on track for its worst stretch since April. Amazon\u2019s stock plunged around 10 percent in early February after the company forecast&nbsp;$200 billion&nbsp;in capital expenditures for 2026\u2014exceeding Wall Street expectations of roughly&nbsp;$146 billion.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">Yet the market has been telling two&nbsp;seemingly incompatible&nbsp;stories about artificial intelligence. The first story is about wasted spending. Four tech giants alone\u2014Alphabet, Meta,&nbsp;Amazon&nbsp;and Microsoft\u2014announced plans to spend around&nbsp;$650 billion&nbsp;on AI infrastructure this year. Amazon\u2019s capex bombshell was only the latest. Alphabet said its 2026 spending could reach&nbsp;$185 billion,&nbsp;nearly double&nbsp;last year. Increasing skepticism over whether these colossal outlays will ever earn back their costs has hammered the stocks of the companies making the bets. Oracle, which has&nbsp;taken on&nbsp;roughly&nbsp;$250 billion&nbsp;in long-term data center leasing commitments, has seen its stock cut in half.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<div class=\"ImageBlock_container__ioAu0\">\n<div class=\"ImageBlock_imageContainer__OPxoe\"><img data-opt-id=758893364  fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"data:image\/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP\/\/\/ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw==\" fifu-lazy=\"1\" fifu-data-sizes=\"auto\" fifu-data-srcset=\"https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=75&resize=75&ssl=1 75w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=100&resize=100&ssl=1 100w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=150&resize=150&ssl=1 150w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=240&resize=240&ssl=1 240w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=320&resize=320&ssl=1 320w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=500&resize=500&ssl=1 500w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=640&resize=640&ssl=1 640w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=800&resize=800&ssl=1 800w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=1024&resize=1024&ssl=1 1024w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=1280&resize=1280&ssl=1 1280w, https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1&w=1600&resize=1600&ssl=1 1600w\" id=\"11492266\" alt loading=\"lazy\" width=\"3200\" height=\"2133\" data-nimg=\"1\" fifu-data-src=\"https:\/\/i3.wp.com\/assets.newsweek.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/PER03_AI_.jpg?w=1600&quality=80&webp=1&ssl=1\"><\/div>\n<div class=\"ImageBlock_caption__LM1HX\">\n<p><span class=\"Caption_text___bgAu\"><span class=\"Caption_credit__LaV5j\">Photo illustration by Newsweek\/Getty<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">But then there was a new story to&nbsp;emerge&nbsp;after&nbsp;Anthropic\u2019s&nbsp;release of new plugins for Claude&nbsp;Cowork\u2014an AI agent capable of automating complex knowledge work in legal,&nbsp;financial&nbsp;and marketing functions\u2014triggered immediate selloffs across enterprise software companies. Asana has shed more than two-thirds of its value since its most recent high. Docusign and ServiceNow have each fallen more than half.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">Stephen Yiu, lead portfolio manager at Blue Whale Capital in London, calls it \u201cthe equivalent of the DeepSeek moment\u201d for software companies. \u201cFor a lot of companies that thought&nbsp;maybe AI&nbsp;is not coming into their territory,&nbsp;basically&nbsp;it\u2019s&nbsp;mind-blowing. \u2018Oh s***, maybe we now have to start seriously thinking that AI capabilities might fundamentally undermine existing business models,\u2019\u201d Yiu told&nbsp;<em>Newsweek<\/em>.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">If AI agents can perform the functions that enterprise software currently handles\u2014managing workflows, processing information, coordinating teams\u2014but better and cheaper, the entire software as a service, or SaaS, industry faces an existential question. Why pay subscription fees for Salesforce or ServiceNow when AI agents can&nbsp;accomplish&nbsp;the same outcomes?&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">There\u2019s&nbsp;a glaring&nbsp;apparent&nbsp;contradiction here: on one hand fears that demand for AI compute&nbsp;won\u2019t&nbsp;materialize on the scale the&nbsp;hyperscalers&nbsp;are building; on the other a fear that the demand for AI will be so great as to level an entire sector. But&nbsp;perhaps this&nbsp;confusion&nbsp;isn\u2019t&nbsp;irrational.&nbsp;It\u2019s&nbsp;the predictable response to a specific phase of technological transformation: While everyone knows AI will be big, nobody knows yet who will win.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">\u201cThe market hates uncertainty,\u201d Bryan Wong, portfolio manager of the&nbsp;Osterweis&nbsp;Opportunity Fund, told&nbsp;<em>Newsweek<\/em>. Software companies \u201cwere priced on just the ability to have recurring subscription revenue forever and growth associated with that. And so now people are questioning terminal values.\u201d&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">Consider a thought experiment.&nbsp;It\u2019s&nbsp;August 12, 1994. You open your copy of&nbsp;<em>The New York Times<\/em>\u2014still a print-only publication\u2014and read the headline, \u201cAttention Shoppers: Internet Is Open,\u201d which announced \u201cthe first retail transaction on the internet\u201d: $12.48 plus shipping for Sting\u2019s latest CD. A light bulb goes off: This e-commerce is going to be huge, so huge it will disrupt&nbsp;all of&nbsp;brick-and-mortar retail! What could you do to make money on this&nbsp;prescient&nbsp;insight?&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">Very little, it turns out. The company featured in the article,&nbsp;NetMarket&nbsp;of Nashua, New Hampshire,&nbsp;didn\u2019t&nbsp;grow into a tech giant. The next&nbsp;<em>Times<\/em>&nbsp;article to mention e-commerce, three weeks later, spotlighted early&nbsp;leaders&nbsp;America Online, Home Shopping Network and QVC\u2014none of which proved to be good long-term bets. HSN lost more than 70 percent of its value from its 1994 price by 2000 and is now worth a fraction of even that.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">To really profit from betting on e-commerce in 1994, you would have needed to know that a man named Jeff Bezos who worked at a hedge fund had weeks earlier started a company in his garage in suburban Seattle called Cadabra, that would eventually become Amazon\u2014as well as also having the foresight to steer clear of Kozmo, Pets.com, eToys, Boo.com and the countless other startups that went belly up in the dot-com bust.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">What if instead you decided to bet against the brick-and-mortar retail giant Walmart? That would have been a massive money loser: Since August 11, 1994, Walmart\u2019s stock price has increased a mammoth 3,125 percent, and the company, after years of learning to master e-commerce, recently swelled its market capitalization to a tech-giant-like&nbsp;$1 trillion. As Yiu observes, Walmart \u201cmanaged to defend themselves very successfully\u201d against the e-commerce threat\u2014and at 40 times forward earnings, the stock now trades at a higher multiple than Nvidia.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">An investor reading the August 12,&nbsp;1994&nbsp;<em>Times<\/em>&nbsp;article with perfect understanding that e-commerce would revolutionize retail had no mechanism for&nbsp;identifying&nbsp;the actual winner, because the actual winner barely existed yet. But even more fundamentally, most of the people who invested in e-commerce during the dot-com boom missed what turned out to be the bigger digital business of the early 2000s: digital advertising, which powered companies like Google and Facebook, which also&nbsp;didn\u2019t&nbsp;yet exist. As Wong noted, \u201cYou can go back to examples of Netscape and AOL, which were kind of the pioneers in their space and not necessarily the horses that won in the long run.\u201d&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">The recent AI market turbulence reflects the same dynamic playing out in real time. AI capabilities are real and advancing rapidly, threatening to disrupt established software companies. But the path to monetizing those capabilities\u2014and the infrastructure&nbsp;required&nbsp;to deliver them\u2014remains&nbsp;fundamentally unclear.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">Ben Barringer, an analyst at Quilter Cheviot, drew a useful distinction: The threat to software&nbsp;isn\u2019t&nbsp;that these companies will vanish tomorrow, but that the risk of disruption \u201chas gone from zero to something\u2014whether it\u2019s 30 percent or 50 percent.\u201d For a&nbsp;sector&nbsp;whose valuations depended on the assumption of perpetual recurring revenue, even a modest increase in the probability of disruption demands a significant repricing. \u201cYou start playing around with your long-term growth rate,\u201d he said, \u201cand that can often mean big changes in your valuation.\u201d&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">But Barringer also offered a critical nuance: Not all software is equally vulnerable. A company like Adobe, which builds tools to help marketing departments produce graphics, is fundamentally different from an enterprise resource planning system that runs a company\u2019s core accounting and compliance functions. The deeper software is embedded in mission-critical&nbsp;operations&nbsp;and the more it provides not just functionality but risk mitigation, regulatory&nbsp;compliance&nbsp;and security, the harder it is to replace. \u201cWhat I\u2019m trying to say,\u201d he told&nbsp;<em>Newsweek<\/em>,&nbsp;\u201cis, are companies just selling you software, or are they selling you risk mitigation?\u201d&nbsp;The market, for the moment, is not making these distinctions. It is, as Barringer put it, \u201cshooting first, asking questions later.\u201d&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">The two stories\u2014excessive infrastructure spending and disruptive AI capability\u2014aren\u2019t actually contradictory.&nbsp;They\u2019re&nbsp;different manifestations of the same uncertainty about who captures value in a massive wave of transformation that everyone can already see coming. A Cassandra scenario in which both sets of fears are true is also entirely plausible: the centralized, massive server farms&nbsp;don\u2019t&nbsp;generate the returns their investors expect, and the technology proves supremely disruptive to incumbents. Something similar happened&nbsp;with&nbsp;the internet itself. As Barringer recalled, \u201cCable companies put billions of dollars into fiber optics and the network. They never got that money back. But the winners were the companies that used those rails to make money.\u201d&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">The warnings from some AI researchers about current architectures potentially being dead ends add another layer of complexity. Significant voices among those who built today\u2019s generative AI argue the future lies in fundamentally different approaches that will surpass current large language models. Companies building empires on today\u2019s technology might face obsolescence just as they achieve dominance\u2014the equivalent of betting everything on dial-up infrastructure in 1998. As I argued recently, AI may still be&nbsp;in&nbsp;the stage of the internet before HTML and web browsers were widely available.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">Markets are pricing in this multilayered uncertainty by discounting everything. Nvidia might be the essential infrastructure provider for the AI age, or AI might not&nbsp;require&nbsp;the specific chips and scale Nvidia provides. Microsoft might successfully integrate AI and dominate the next era, or AI-native companies might make Microsoft\u2019s stack obsolete. Oracle\u2019s data center investments might generate enormous returns or represent&nbsp;$250 billion&nbsp;in stranded assets.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Paragraph_blockParagraph__I2kr4\">\u201cIf you think about 100 companies coming in to try to disrupt the other side of the fence, ultimately that 100 would be consolidated to 10,\u201d said Yiu. A third or more of the capital pouring into AI will&nbsp;likely be&nbsp;wasted.&nbsp;That\u2019s&nbsp;not a bug of the current moment\u2014it\u2019s&nbsp;the defining feature of every major technological transition. From an investor\u2019s perspective, the challenge&nbsp;isn\u2019t&nbsp;predicting whether AI will transform&nbsp;industries,&nbsp;it\u2019s&nbsp;picking the survivors from a field that&nbsp;hasn\u2019t&nbsp;finished forming. As Wong put it: \u201cWe\u2019re going to have to assess business models and management teams and see how it plays out.\u201d That is not a statement of ignorance. It is the only honest assessment of a market that has just realized what it&nbsp;doesn\u2019t&nbsp;know.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/blockads.fivefilters.org\"> <\/a><\/strong> <a href=\"https:\/\/blockads.fivefilters.org\/acceptable.html\"> <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#8230; is about wasted spending. Four <span class=\"match\">tech<\/span> giants alone\u00e2\u0080\u0094Alphabet, Meta,\u00c2\u00a0 &#8230; didn\u00e2\u0080\u0099t\u00c2\u00a0grow into a <span class=\"match\">tech<\/span> giant. The next\u00c2\u00a0Times\u00c2\u00a0 &#8230; its market capitalization to a <span class=\"match\">tech<\/span>-giant-like\u00c2\u00a0$1 trillion. &#8230; their investors expect, and the <span class=\"match\">technology<\/span> proves supremely disruptive to incumbents &#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"fifu_image_url":"","fifu_image_alt":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-84788","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-news","wpcat-1-id"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/84788","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=84788"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/84788\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=84788"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=84788"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/new7.shop\/zerocostfreehost\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=84788"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}