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AI Anxiety Meets Cooling Inflation: A Reality Check for U.S. Stocks

BACK

U.S. equities saw a sharp pullback on February 12, with the S&P 500 down 1.6%, the Nasdaq Composite off 2%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average losing nearly 670 points.On the surface, it looked like another tech-led selloff. Beneath it, however, the move reflected something deeper: investors are reassessing not just how much artificial intelligence (AI) will help companies, but which business models it may disrupt.Several software and AI-exposed technology stocks were hit particularly hard. Companies that had previously benefited from the AI growth narrative suddenly faced a more complex question:

  • Could AI compress margins?
  • Could it disrupt traditional distribution models?
  • Could it commoditize parts of their value chain?

Even strong quarterly earnings were insufficient to protect stocks if forward guidance suggested margin pressure or uncertainty. The market shifted from rewarding top-line growth to scrutinizing sustainability, free cash flow durability, and operating leverage.

 

Market Signals: Volatility in Equities and Strength in Precious Metals

U.S. equity markets have been flashing mixed signals recently, and the move in gold and silver helps explain what’s going on beneath the surface. Stocks have struggled to regain a stable footing, with volatility resurfacing most clearly in the Nasdaq after investor concerns around rising capital spending and a slowdown in AI growth. At the same time, gold and silver have surged to record highs. That contrast matters. It suggests investors are becoming less focused on maximizing growth and more focused on protecting purchasing power.

Gold briefly traded above $5,600 per ounce before easing back toward $5,300, while silver pushed past $120 before pulling back as well. This kind of pause is not unusual after such a sharp, crowded rally. Importantly, it does not change the broader trend. Gold remains up roughly 20% year to date, supported by a weaker U.S. dollar and declining real rates. The Federal Reserve’s decision to hold policy steady, combined with limited resistance to dollar weakness, has reinforced the view that monetary policy is now tilted toward accommodation rather than restraint.

 

AI Valuations Under Scrutiny: From Narrative to Fundamentals

Importantly, this does not signal the onset of a structural bear market.

  • The U.S. economy remains resilient.
  • Labor markets continue to hold firm.
  • Inflation is trending lower.

However, investor behavior is evolving. Capital is no longer indiscriminately flowing into anything associated with AI. Markets are differentiating between:

  1. Infrastructure beneficiaries generating durable cash flow.
  2. Companies with pricing power and defensible moats
  3. Firms whose models may be disrupted by AI commoditization

This transition marks a shift from narrative-driven multiple expansion to fundamentally driven selectivity.

 

Investment Strategy Outlook: Positioning for Selective Alpha

In the near term, elevated volatility and sector dispersion are likely. Cooling inflation reduces the likelihood of renewed rate spikes, which provides marginal support for equity valuations. However, earnings quality, balance sheet strength, and free cash flow visibility will increasingly outweigh beta exposure.From a tactical asset allocation perspective, this environment favors:

  • Reducing broad, passive market exposure
  • Rotating toward selective alpha opportunities
  • Prioritizing companies with strong cash generation and infrastructure leverage
  • Avoiding purely sentiment-driven growth trades

Artificial intelligence remains a powerful long-term structural theme. But markets are transitioning from euphoria to evaluation.The February pullback should be viewed as a valuation reset and risk recalibration, not a systemic breakdown. The next phase of the U.S. equity market is likely to be more selective, less exuberant, and increasingly anchored in fundamentals rather than forward hype.

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