NEW YORK, November 10, 2025: U.S. stock markets experienced notable declines this week as concerns over elevated valuations in artificial-intelligence linked stocks and a broader technology pull-back weighed on investor sentiment. On Thursday the S&P 500 fell 1.1 % to 6,720.32, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.8 % to 46,912.30 and the Nasdaq Composite slid 1.9 % to 23,053.99. Technology and semiconductor stocks, including major players linked to artificial-intelligence applications, led the losses. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, used as a key gauge for the chip sector, declined around 2.4 %. Market commentators noted that the S&P 500’s technology weighting is now about 36 %, a higher share than seen during the dot-com era, underscoring the market’s dependence on tech performance.

Analysts pointed to stock-market valuations that appear stretched. The forward price-to-earnings ratio for the S&P 500 was cited at approximately 23 times, above its historical average near 19 times, while tech-sector P/E ratios climbed toward 32 times versus a ten-year average closer to 22 times. The divergence between valuation levels and expected growth in specific sectors has reignited caution among institutional investors. Further adding to market pressure were data-points indicating a weakening U.S. labour market. Outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported announced job cuts in October reached 153,074 the highest for that month since 2003.
With official employment data delayed amid the ongoing federal government shutdown, investors relied more heavily on alternative indicators for economic health and growth prospects. The convergence of elevated tech valuations and signs of labour-market stress has triggered a recalibration in market tone. A recent report noted that the AI-exposed stocks that had driven much of the rally this year are now facing sharper scrutiny amid signs of heavier capex, concentrated earnings and slower-than-anticipated productivity gains. The interplay of these factors has intensified the focus on what some market participants describe as an “AI bubble” risk.
Institutional investors trim AI sector exposure
Despite the recent pull-back, major technology and AI-exposed firms retain strong fundamentals relative to the broader market. Profits for many remain robust, and corporate balance sheets continue to display financial strength. Nonetheless, the heavy concentration of market capitalisation in a small number of AI-linked companies has heightened sensitivity to shifts in sentiment or earnings expectations. Global implications are drawing attention from policy-makers and investors alike. With U.S. markets tightly tied to major technology firms, a sustained correction in that subset could reverberate across other asset classes or regions.
MENA portfolios adjust amid global AI market pullback
For markets in the Middle East and North Africa, where sovereign-wealth and institutional allocations increasingly include global tech exposure, the recent volatility serves as a reminder of interconnectedness in the global financial system. As markets digest the recent developments, key areas to monitor include earnings for leading‐tech firms, indicators of labour-market health, and shifts in investor appetite for growth versus value-oriented strategies. While the recent decline need not signify the end of the current tech cycle, the heightened sensitivity to valuations and economic signals marks a phase of closer scrutiny for market participants. – By Content Syndication Services.
