The stock market is having one of those confusing days where the rulebook seems to have changed overnight. U.S. stocks took a notable dip on Thursday as investors grappled with a fundamental question that’s been haunting Wall Street for months: Just because a company invests billions in artificial intelligence doesn’t mean it’s actually going to make money. The S&P 500 dropped 1.1% while the Nasdaq composite fell 1.5%, signaling that optimism around the AI boom might finally be meeting reality.
What’s particularly fascinating—and frankly, a bit embarrassing for some major corporations—is that several well-known tech companies reported genuinely strong earnings and still watched their stock prices plummet. It’s like showing up to a party with excellent wine and homemade desserts only to realize nobody wants to talk to you anymore.
The disconnect between earnings and market sentiment
AppLovin became the poster child for this bizarre market behavior. The software company reported stronger profits than analysts predicted, yet its stock tumbled 17.5% in a single trading day. At this point, the company is down more than 40% since the start of 2026. CEO Adam Foroughi basically threw his hands up during a conference call, noting the stark contrast between what the numbers actually show and what the market perceives. He observed that despite solid business fundamentals, investor sentiment had turned decidedly negative.
The core concern driving these selloffs isn’t complicated: investors worry that artificial intelligence technology might fundamentally disrupt how software companies operate and generate revenue. When your entire business model faces existential questions, even beating earnings forecasts doesn’t help much.
When tech giants disappoint with their success
Cisco Systems experienced a similar fate, dropping 11.5% despite beating expectations on both profit and revenue. Here’s where things get uncomfortable for the networking giant. Cisco indicated that profit margins might squeeze during the current quarter, potentially due to rising computer memory prices driven by massive AI spending across the industry.
That single comment—essentially saying future margins could suffer—was enough to send investors running for the exits. The broader implication is troubling for the entire tech sector: What if all this spending on AI infrastructure doesn’t actually translate into the productivity gains companies are betting on? The market is starting to price in that possibility.
The real winners in the AI arms race
Not everyone is suffering through this correction. Companies positioned as the infrastructure backbone supporting the AI boom are thriving. Equinix, a digital infrastructure company, jumped 12.8% despite reporting quarterly results that missed analyst expectations. The reason? The company’s forward guidance for 2026 exceeded expectations, and data center demand remains phenomenal.
This reveals the actual pecking order in the AI economy. While software companies worry about disruption, the companies providing the physical infrastructure—the servers, data centers, and networking equipment necessary to power these AI systems—are cashing in. It’s reminiscent of the gold rush era when the most reliable profits went to those selling picks and shovels rather than those searching for gold.
Beyond tech: The broader market picture
Outside the technology sector, traditional retail and food stocks found some footing. McDonald’s climbed 2.2% following better-than-expected quarterly profits, with the restaurant chain attributing gains to expanded affordability initiatives and strategic price reductions on certain combo meals. Walmart’s 3.5% rally represented one of the strongest upward forces on the broader market index, recovering losses from earlier in the week.
These gains suggest investors are hedging their bets against an uncertain future by rotating money into more stable, established companies. When technology stocks are this volatile, the logic goes, why not bet on companies selling hamburgers and groceries?
The employment question that could reshape everything
Treasury yields declined following reports about unemployment benefit filings, which ticked slightly higher than economists anticipated. However, the number remained lower than the previous week, suggesting potential stabilization in the job market. This seemingly minor data point carries enormous implications.
A strengthening employment picture could influence the Federal Reserve to maintain its current interest rate policy, essentially pausing further cuts. This possibility exists despite President Donald Trump’s vocal and repeated calls for lower interest rates. The Fed’s dilemma is genuine: lower rates boost the economy but can accelerate inflation, which remains a persistent concern.
Friday’s inflation report will prove crucial in determining market direction. Economists anticipate inflation figures will show a decline to 2.5% from December’s 2.7%, potentially providing some relief to policymakers navigating this delicate balance between economic stimulus and price stability.

