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Posted December 12, 2025 at 1:15 pm
As they did yesterday morning (and most others in recent weeks), we saw early morning futures bounce from overnight lows to point to a roughly unchanged market open. While yesterday saw initial declines after Oracle’s (ORCL) poorly received earnings report, a bout of early selling abated thanks to a lack of follow-through selling and a fierce rotation out of tech and into financials, materials, and small caps. Today we found Broadcom (AVGO) bearing the brunt of the market’s woes before ORCL once again contributed its own set of bad vibes.
It is quite telling to see a -10% selloff after a market leader like AVGO reported solid earnings and guidance but nonetheless got punished for failing to offer an outlook that matched the most optimistic forecasts. This is a sign that the AI enthusiasm that has powered the current bull market is getting stirred, if not shaken.
But then we received a report that some ORCL data centers for OpenAI will be delayed from 2027 to 2028. This adds to the concerns that ORCL has begun to borrow to finance data centers that may not eventually prove necessary. In a time of more robust market sentiment, this might be interpreted as good news – that they are not as quick to get ahead of themselves as feared. But the current market psychology has become far less forgiving and more willing to take a “glass half-empty” approach to news of that sort.

Source: Interactive Brokers
As noted earlier, the S&P 500 (SPX) was able to achieve a fresh all-time closing high yesterday thanks to a powerful move from tech stocks into more cyclical and rate-sensitive sectors. That rotation not only pushed SPX to a record, but Russell 2000 (RTY), S&P Midcap 400 (MID), and Dow Jones (INDU) also notched all-time closing highs. The Nasdaq 100 (NDX) was the key laggard, closing -0.35% lower on the weakness in tech. Today, amidst more broad-based selling, RTY and MID (though not INDU) are underperforming SPX, though only slightly.
About that NDX underperformance: note that NDX is more than 2% below its all-time high. This reflects the recent underperformance of tech stocks versus the rest of the market.

Source: Interactive Brokers
When we view NDX’ performance on a normalized basis since the day prior to its last record high, October 29th, the date of the FOMC meeting prior to this week’s, we see that it has lagged behind its record-setting counterparts.

Source:Bloomberg
To be sure, this could be nothing more than a minor bit of temporary underperformance by a key industry sector. Unfortunately, that sector is extraordinarily heavily weighted not only in key indices like SPX, and to a greater extent NDX, but also in many investors’ portfolios. Despite yesterday’s performance, it is difficult to imagine a sustained rotation that would be large enough to overcome a prolonged selloff in the megacap tech stocks that have powered the bull market. Unfortunately, I can’t shake the memory of a similar setup at the end of 2021, when NDX topped out in November, SPX topped out on the first day of 2022, and those highs were not recovered until roughly two years later. We’re not at that point, and frankly, I hope that past performance doesn’t predict future results.
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Inflation expectations shifted before stocks reacted with CPI ~7% YoY by December 2021 (highest inflation print in ~40 years), so prior rollover coincided with tightening liquidity & that’s not the backdrop right now
I’m only #3 in the list of the 7 deadly sins, so I only last for so long, and then… I say “so long” to ‘going long’, and I will race you and beat you to the exits.
One of the more thoughtful and creative comments I’ve seen on here. Well played!
If investors realized how primitive the coding process is being done today… even with odd bits like Gemini/Anitgravity to help make generic apps easier, these buts starting to show up, but really… I’m not sure why they’d invest a dime in it until it proves itself, the infrastructure is fully built out, debugged, working and secure, the speculation and hype dies down, is gone and we have to deal with making new badly done tech monetizable and showing real bottome line results per quarter instead… Dot.com stumbled out of the gate due to lack of buildout, and it took buildout years to work, cell tech as well and this will too. So don’t be simplistic about timeframes. 4T: These Things Take Time. Think 18 months to several years from now. Massive Fed debt? Upper crust consumers still willing to spank a dime large> Let’s hope it all pays off, and soon Wall St. loves to hype a bubble
NQ and ES rug pulls are nothing compared to Silver rug pull yesterday.
“I hope that past performance doesn’t predict future results.” There are many, many people with cash on the sidelines who are not necessarily bearish, but know that the market, particularly tech stocks, are by almost every metric historically overvalued, and waiting to invest at significantly lower prices. I have posted several times noting the total market cap of the S&P 500, as well as how the weightings of both the S&P and the Nasdaq 100 have become extremely risky. Broadcom’s tumble on Friday shows how vulnerable tech stocks really are now. I am certain that you will be able to buy the SPY below $600 again, and it could very see $550 or even test the lows of this past April at some point, but $600 is a lock.