The Japan Times - AI sparks Wall Street panic

EUR -
AED 4.356514
AFN 75.323529
ALL 96.429205
AMD 446.388682
ANG 2.123076
AOA 1087.795094
ARS 1659.866288
AUD 1.674448
AWG 2.135258
AZN 2.017736
BAM 1.955312
BBD 2.388105
BDT 145.00384
BGN 1.954527
BHD 0.447239
BIF 3497.730954
BMD 1.186254
BND 1.498645
BOB 8.192957
BRL 6.207434
BSD 1.185644
BTN 107.392219
BWP 15.637628
BYN 3.398082
BYR 23250.581896
BZD 2.384606
CAD 1.615601
CDF 2675.002602
CHF 0.913232
CLF 0.025903
CLP 1022.80033
CNY 8.195415
CNH 8.170687
COP 4351.144739
CRC 575.078405
CUC 1.186254
CUP 31.435736
CVE 110.23751
CZK 24.258471
DJF 211.134468
DKK 7.471479
DOP 73.864382
DZD 153.798106
EGP 55.419067
ERN 17.793813
ETB 184.653157
FJD 2.602108
FKP 0.869306
GBP 0.869121
GEL 3.173184
GGP 0.869306
GHS 13.047746
GIP 0.869306
GMD 87.193963
GNF 10406.448759
GTQ 9.093732
GYD 248.048143
HKD 9.270778
HNL 31.327376
HRK 7.533427
HTG 155.462542
HUF 377.552084
IDR 19951.609026
ILS 3.667287
IMP 0.869306
INR 107.622969
IQD 1553.265031
IRR 49970.957451
ISK 144.996381
JEP 0.869306
JMD 185.560765
JOD 0.841032
JPY 181.900105
KES 153.026219
KGS 103.738066
KHR 4768.850971
KMF 492.295949
KPW 1067.637552
KRW 1710.151267
KWD 0.363718
KYD 0.988087
KZT 586.743466
LAK 25444.512764
LBP 106176.102595
LKR 366.620936
LRD 221.054875
LSL 19.029596
LTL 3.5027
LVL 0.717553
LYD 7.475388
MAD 10.841396
MDL 20.132658
MGA 5186.881423
MKD 61.640413
MMK 2490.724609
MNT 4229.671611
MOP 9.548341
MRU 47.255008
MUR 54.484066
MVR 18.274288
MWK 2055.956623
MXN 20.353767
MYR 4.628831
MZN 75.813154
NAD 19.029596
NGN 1605.927369
NIO 43.629304
NOK 11.282404
NPR 171.833667
NZD 1.962652
OMR 0.456112
PAB 1.185704
PEN 3.977909
PGK 5.089795
PHP 68.768358
PKR 331.614286
PLN 4.209826
PYG 7776.388537
QAR 4.321022
RON 5.095434
RSD 117.434451
RUB 90.983735
RWF 1731.026695
SAR 4.448741
SBD 9.543631
SCR 16.34316
SDG 713.551753
SEK 10.619407
SGD 1.496685
SHP 0.889998
SLE 29.003585
SLL 24875.156223
SOS 677.056843
SRD 44.785794
STD 24553.066455
STN 24.494201
SVC 10.374763
SYP 13119.46693
SZL 19.025897
THB 36.881846
TJS 11.18631
TMT 4.15189
TND 3.418448
TOP 2.856216
TRY 51.850215
TTD 8.048264
TWD 37.234199
TZS 3089.397298
UAH 51.133473
UGX 4196.953387
USD 1.186254
UYU 45.708601
UZS 14571.98032
VES 465.877686
VND 30807.021013
VUV 141.256996
WST 3.217378
XAF 655.81557
XAG 0.015399
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.205911
XCG 2.136839
XDR 0.815624
XOF 655.81557
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.743419
ZAR 18.928927
ZMK 10677.709144
ZMW 21.549534
ZWL 381.973361
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    86.5

    -1.8%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    25.71

    -0.47%

  • JRI

    0.2135

    13.24

    +1.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0647

    23.64

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    58.93

    +0.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.75

    +0.21%

  • RELX

    2.2500

    31.06

    +7.24%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    92.4

    +1.28%

  • AZN

    1.0300

    205.55

    +0.5%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    15.57

    -0.32%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    59.5

    -1.87%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    17.1

    +1.35%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    98.07

    +0.16%

  • BP

    0.4700

    37.66

    +1.25%


AI sparks Wall Street panic




In early February 2026 the technology industry found itself at the epicentre of a historic stock‑market rout. The catalyst was not disappointing earnings or macroeconomic upheaval but the release of a suite of generative‑AI plug‑ins. Anthropic, a San Francisco‑based start‑up backed by the likes of Amazon and Google, launched new tools for its Claude Cowork agent that automate legal and administrative tasks. In demonstrations the agent drafted contracts, filed regulatory documents and answered complex finance queries. This display of competence was hailed as a triumph for AI but it triggered panic among investors.

By 4 February the sell‑off had wiped nearly $830 billion from the S&P 500 software and services index, the worst draw‑down in the sector since the Federal Reserve’s rate‑driven rout of 2022. A Goldman Sachs basket of U.S. software stocks slumped 6 % in a single session. Thomson Reuters, owner of the Westlaw legal database, fell almost 16 %, and online legal service provider LegalZoom crashed close to 20 %. Assets managed by private‑equity firms such as Ares, KKR and Blue Owl fell between three and eleven per cent. ServiceNow, Salesforce, HubSpot, Atlassian, Docusign, Asana, Workday and Adobe all suffered double‑digit declines.

What spooked investors?
The panic reflected a shift in investor perception of generative AI. For much of 2025 Wall Street treated AI as a productivity enhancer layered on top of existing software, boosting subscription models and valuations. Anthropic’s plug‑ins suggested something more disruptive. They allow a single agent to complete tasks autonomously from raw data, bypassing conventional software workflows. In the words of the Economic Times, the launch led investors to view AI as a potential replacement for entire categories of software and services. This “SaaSpocalypse” narrative posited that moats built on proprietary data or per‑seat licensing could erode rapidly.

Analysts also compared the development to Amazon’s expansion beyond books. Just as the e‑commerce giant used its distribution foothold to disrupt retailers, AI agents might use their knowledge to disrupt legal, financial and marketing service providers. The fear was exacerbated by the timing: on the same day that Anthropic’s plug‑ins appeared, OpenAI previewed updates to its Codex agent. The combined announcements fed a narrative that software is at risk of obsolescence, prompting portfolio managers to sell anything exposed to enterprise applications.

Is the reaction justified?
Not all observers share the doom‑laden view. Jensen Huang, chief executive of Nvidia, called the sell‑off “illogical”, arguing that AI agents will still rely on traditional software for tasks such as database management, accounting and compliance. Mark Murphy of JPMorgan said the idea that a plug‑in could replace every layer of mission‑critical enterprise software is an “illogical leap”. Talley Leger of The Wealth Consulting Group contended that improved AI tools could lower the cost of producing software and widen margins.

The Economic Times emphasised that proprietary datasets remain valuable. Companies like FactSet, S&P Global and Moody’s rely on continuous data collection and licensing; AI models still struggle to replicate these curated databases. The newspaper also pointed out that the sell‑off underscored a shift from per‑seat subscriptions to outcome‑based pricing models. Newer software firms and AI‑native start‑ups already charge for completed tasks rather than for user access, suggesting that incumbents may adapt rather than vanish.

Winners amid the rout
Not every technology company suffered. Semiconductor designers and cloud operators saw renewed interest. Autonomous AI agents require far more computing power than simple text‑generation models; reasoning‑heavy workloads increase demand for high‑performance accelerators. Nvidia’s GPUs, along with Amazon’s and Google’s cloud‑computing divisions, stood to gain as always‑on agents drive higher demand for data‑centre resources. Investors also looked towards physical‑world AI: robotics and autonomous mobility require pairing intelligence with machines. Tesla’s Optimus and Cybercab projects attracted attention as they represent AI beyond the digital realm.

Lessons for software investors
The panic that erased hundreds of billions of dollars from software valuations highlights two realities. First, markets are hyper‑sensitive to the idea that AI could disintermediate middlemen. Anthropic’s plug‑in release occurred just weeks after several software firms reported solid earnings. It took one product demonstration to reverse sentiment, underlining how quickly narratives shift.

Second, the sell‑off illustrates a broader debate about disruption versus augmentation. Generative‑AI agents may indeed commoditise some tasks, especially in legal research and basic data analysis. Yet the same tools could lower costs and enable new services that expand addressable markets. History suggests that productivity‑enhancing technology often enhances total demand rather than destroying it outright. The eventual winners are likely to be those companies that embrace agentic AI, reimagine pricing and focus on proprietary data or infrastructure.

Software stocks may continue to trade with heightened volatility as investors recalibrate expectations. The “SaaSpocalypse” of 2026 will be remembered less for the market value it erased than for the questions it raised about the future of software business models. Whether AI spells obsolescence or opportunity will depend on how quickly companies adapt their tools, pricing strategies and value propositions in an age of autonomous agents.