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Big tech stocks lose billions as AI spending fears hit valuations

By Thomson Reuters Feb 16, 2026 | 3:38 AM

Feb 16 (Reuters) – The world’s most valuable technology stocks have suffered sharp declines in market value this year after years ​of outsized gains, as investors question ‌whether heavy spending on AI will generate sufficient returns to justify the lofty valuations.

Microsoft shares have fallen about 17% year-to-date on concerns over risks to ‌its ​AI business and growing ⁠competition from Google’s latest ⁠Gemini model and Anthropic’s Claude Cowork AI agent, wiping roughly $613 billion off its market value to about $2.98 trillion as of Friday.

Amazon ​has shed around 13.85% so far this year, erasing about $343 billion in market ⁠value and leaving the ⁠company valued at roughly $2.13 trillion.

Earlier this ​month, Amazon said it expects capital spending to ​jump more than 50% this year.

Nvidia, Apple ‌and Alphabet have also seen their market values decline by $89.67 billion, $256.44 billion and $87.96 billion, respectively, since the start of 2026, to $4.44 ⁠trillion, $3.76 trillion and $3.7 trillion.

The pullback signals a broader shift in market psychology, with investors moving from rewarding ⁠long-term AI ‌ambitions to demanding near-term earnings ⁠visibility after years of speculative ​enthusiasm.

By contrast, ‌TSMC, Samsung Electronics and Walmart ​have added $293.89 ⁠billion, $272.88 billion and $179.17 billion in market value, respectively, over the same period, lifting their valuations to $1.58 trillion, $817 billion and $1.07 trillion.

(Reporting by Gaurav Dogra and Patturaja Murugaboopathy in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Sumana Nandy)