A chill has descended upon the Asian markets, as the relentless, AI-fueled rally that has defined the year finally appears to be hitting a wall.
A sharp sell-off in technology stocks is dragging the entire region lower, as a powerful and long-simmering debate over stretched valuations and a potential bubble finally boils over into a wave of profit-taking.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index has dropped 0.8 percent, with the pain being felt most acutely in the high-flying chip sector, which has been the engine of the recent gains.
The sell-off is a clear sign that after a period of unbridled optimism, a new and more cautious mood is taking hold.
‘The market appears overheated’
The surge in AI-focused technology companies has been nothing short of spectacular, but it has also fueled a growing sense of unease that prices are running dangerously ahead of fundamentals.
This week, that unease has turned into action.
A gauge of tech shares in Hong Kong is now on track for its worst week since the start of August, and in a particularly telling move, a major Chinese chipmaker, SMIC, fell after reports that brokerages were cutting its margin financing ratio to zero, a clear signal of concern over its valuation.
“Some areas of the market appear overheated,” said Keith Lerner at Truist Advisory Services Inc.
The extended stretch without a meaningful pullback leaves the market more sensitive to negative surprises.
A tale of two theses: A bubble or a boom?
This is the great debate that is now gripping the market. On one side are the bears, who see the echoes of the dot-com bubble in the current AI frenzy.
On the other are the bulls, who argue that this time is fundamentally different.
“These aren’t the dot-com companies of a quarter-century ago that didn’t have earnings, or even viable business models,” argued Daniel Skelly, head of Morgan Stanley’s Wealth Management Market Research & Strategy Team.
He contends that the leading spenders in the AI race are enjoying real and growing earnings power. “That doesn’t mean the market won’t have setbacks, though,” he added.
A divergent picture
This tech-led selloff is not a uniform story. In a stunning display of defiance, South Korean shares have surged upon their return from a week-long holiday, with the heavyweight Samsung Electronics Co. jumping an incredible 6 percent, a powerful outlier in a sea of red.
This complex and contradictory picture is setting the stage for a volatile end to the week. In India, after a period of strong gains, the Sensex and Nifty are poised to open lower, tracking the broader weakness.
The trends on the Gift Nifty indicate a muted start for the Indian benchmark, a sign that the chill from the tech selloff is being felt far and wide. The great AI rally may not be over, but it is certainly facing its most serious test yet.
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