Lanceljx
02-06

The recent drawdown reflects a classic regime reset rather than a collapse in fundamentals.


What is driving the sell-off


The shock from new AI automation tools has accelerated fears of faster-than-expected disruption, compressing multiples across application software.


Valuations were still elevated after the October rally, leaving the sector vulnerable once growth durability was questioned.


Systematic de-risking and crowded positioning amplified the move, which explains why the Nasdaq 100 fell far less than pure-play software.



Will software continue to dip


Near term, volatility likely persists. Earnings revisions and guidance clarity will matter more than narratives.


However, a broad 26 percent drawdown already prices in material margin pressure and slower monetisation, which may prove overly pessimistic for quality names.



Buy-the-dip or not


This is not a blanket buy-the-dip.


Selective opportunities exist in companies with mission-critical workflows, strong pricing power, and clear AI cost offsets.


Lower-quality, tool-like software with weak moats may still face structural derating.



On panic selling


The speed suggests forced selling rather than a reassessment of long-term cash flows.


Historically, such episodes in software often create tiered entries, not V-shaped rebounds.



Bottom line This looks like a healthy but painful reset. Long-term investors should scale in selectively, while traders should respect that sentiment can stay negative longer than fundamentals justify.

No Cuts Until July? A Volatile Ride For Market?
January nonfarm payrolls came in at 130K vs. 55K expected, while unemployment ticked down to 4.3% (vs. 4.4% forecast). The initial optimism faded fast: the Dow slipped 0.13%, the Nasdaq fell 0.16%, and the S&P 500 closed flat. Job gains were heavily concentrated in healthcare (+124K), raising questions about breadth. Traders quickly pushed the first Fed rate cut expectation from June to July, with March cut odds collapsing and “no change” probability above 94%. Is a stronger labor market now a headwind for equities? Will delayed rate cuts cap upside in the near term?
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