Wall St Week Ahead-Walmart, economic data await investors confronting AI 'whack-a-mole'
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 02/15/26 09:00 AM EST*
AI disruption fears hit industries, investors eye next shoe to drop
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Walmart
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Economic data due include PCE inflation gauge, Q4 GDP
By Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK, Feb 13 (Reuters) - U.S. stock investors will
be on guard next week for further volatility induced by fears of
artificial intelligence disruption as they also assess the
durability of a rotation beneath the market's surface, ?along
with upcoming earnings from Walmart
The benchmark S&P 500 closed on ?Thursday down 0.2% for the year, but that modest change belies significant swings in pockets of the market. After sinking shares of software companies this month, fears that new AI tools will disrupt various industries, ?including insurance, wealth management and transportation, slammed stocks this week.
"It's all this whack-a-mole game of trying to figure out what AI is going to destroy ?next in a world where you can invent a narrative, because this technology is so new that ?artificial intelligence is likely going to end ?up eating the whole world," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth. "That's probably not the case, but that's where we are right now in that sentiment." The swoons for various ?industries to start 2026 contrast with much of last year, when optimism over ?AI-driven profits and capital spending helped drive a broad swath of stocks higher.
AI winner and loser moves in single stocks "are getting more and more extreme," Jonathan Krinsky, BTIG's chief market technician, said in a note on Thursday morning.
"At a certain ?point ... we begin getting concerned that the weakness supersedes the strength and the ?broad market becomes vulnerable," ?Krinsky said.
ROTATIONS PAVING WAY FOR NEW MARKET LEADERS?
Pressure from AI has also contributed to declines for the heavyweight technology sector, which has mostly led the gains for the bull market that began in October 2022, but was last down over 4% this year.
Broadening ?gains have helped offset tech's troubles, with investors moving into groups that have lagged. Four sectors are up at least 10% in 2026 - ?energy, consumer staples, materials and industrials - while small-cap stocks have also posted outsized increases.
"We're starting to get an embedded leadership shift that's undeniable at this point," said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide. "This shift is now getting embedded into the psychology of investors."
Tech retains a major presence in U.S. indexes, including a one-third weighting in the S&P 500. Even if tech weakness drags down the market barometers, investors have said wider participation in equity gains bodes well for ?the market's health.
"It's been ?really difficult to make those new all-time highs because of the absence of tech leadership," said Kevin ?Gordon, head of macro research and strategy at Charles Schwab. "But this is not necessarily a bad thing."
WALMART EARNINGS, INFLATION DATA ON TAP
Walmart's
U.S. traders face a shortened week due to a holiday on Monday. Economic reports include the advance reading of fourth-quarter ?GDP, a monthly consumer sentiment survey, and the personal consumption expenditures price index, a key inflation measure. Data this week showed a surprising jump in U.S. job growth in January, suggesting signs of labor market stability.
Some of the sectors that have been part of the "catch-up trade" in recent weeks are also sensitive ?to the health of the economy, Gordon said.
"To some extent, that ?is pricing in maybe not a firm re-acceleration in the economy, but I think at least a stabilization," ?Gordon said. (Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf Editing by Rod Nickel)
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