Wells Fargo Says Tech Rally Looks Too Hot to Handle
Wells Fargo Warns: Tech Sector’s Sky-High Expectations Could Lead to Trouble The AI trade — powered by heavyweights like Nvidia — bounced back to start the week, but renewed concerns over CoreWeave are cooling the excitement. Investors now find themselves torn between chasing the AI boom and fearing another bubble, reminiscent of the dot-com era. That uneasy balance prompted the Wells Fargo Investment Institute (WFII) to downgrade the S&P 500 Information Technology sector — home to Nvidia, Microsoft, Broadcom, and other AI leaders — from favorable to neutral. The main reason: valuations have gotten too rich. According to Douglas Beath, WFII’s global investment strategist, the sector surged nearly 60% since April, outperforming the broader S&P 500 by over 25%. While AI momentum continues to drive sales, profits, and cash flow, Beath warns that overly optimistic sentiment makes the sector susceptible to disappointment if earnings results fall even slightly short of expectations. Beath also points to lingering U.S.–China trade tensions and growing concerns over the payoff from massive AI capital spending. Investors are becoming uneasy about whether these record-level investments will deliver the returns needed to justify lofty stock prices. Although a correction may be temporary, WFII advises taking some profits and trimming tech exposure back to market weight. Instead, the firm recommends rotating into industrials, utilities, and financials — three sectors that can still benefit from the AI infrastructure boom but come with more reasonable valuations. In Beath’s view, the message is clear: AI’s growth story remains intact — but investors may want to cool their enthusiasm for tech stocks.






