Big Tech's $600 billion spending plans exacerbate investors' AI headache
The Hindu
A planned $600 billion artificial intelligence spending splurge by big tech firms in 2026 is adding to investor unease as they assess the implications for profitability as well as a potential existential threat to software firms.
A planned $600 billion artificial intelligence spending splurge by big tech firms in 2026 is adding to investor unease as they assess the implications for profitability as well as a potential existential threat to software firms. Amazon, which said its capital expenditure could double from a year ago, fell sharply in pre-market trading on Friday, while shares in other big tech companies rose and Wall Street stock futures firmed.
Meanwhile, shares in data analytics firms continued to come under selling pressure on concerns that they face an existential threat from powerful new AI models. London-listed RELX’s shares were down 4.8% and set for a 17% tumble in their worst week since 2020, while the S&P 500 software and services index has fallen almost 10% this week and India’s IT index has shed around 7%.
Alphabet and Amazon, members of the so-called Magnificent 7 group of the largest U.S. companies, revealed plans this week to spend much more than anticipated on AI infrastructure. While markets reacted with concern, knocking the shares, analysts said they have room because they are profitable.
Although analysts said the stock market selloff has been overdone, investors remain cautious. “Headlines that would have pushed shares to fresh highs during the peak of AI optimism are now being interpreted far more cautiously by investors,” said Carlota Estragues Lopez, equity strategist at St. James’s Place in London. “It’s not just return on investment that worries investors, but also the risk of narrow market leadership that struggles to broaden beyond a handful of mega-cap names.”
A selloff in software and data and analytics firms was triggered by a new plug-in from Anthropic’s Claude. Shares in London Stock Exchange Group clawed back some ground on Friday, but the price was still down almost 6% for the week in a second straight week of sharp losses.
This week’s drawdown in AI-exposed shares has weighed on broader equity markets.













