Nvidia, Tesla stocks slip as ‘Magnificent 7’ names lead markets lower


The “Magnificent Seven” stocks were at the center of another sell-off hitting markets early Monday.

Shares of Nvidia (NVDA), Tesla (TSLA), Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), Apple (AAPL), and Microsoft (MSFT) all fell, with Tesla’s more than 8% drop leading the way.

The selling pressure hitting the Magnificent Seven comes after US markets suffered their worst week of the year as the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) fell into correction last Thursday — defined as a 10% decline from its most recent closing high — and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) enters the week 6% off its record high reached on Feb. 19.

NasdaqGS – Nasdaq Real Time Price USD

As of 10:34:07 AM EDT. Market Open.

NVDA TSLA META

Last week, Nvidia stock lost $1 trillion from its record highs reached last year, while losses on Tesla stock are nearing 50% from its record close back in December. Nvidia has been the biggest winner from the AI boom that kicked off in 2023, while Tesla’s stock — which has ebbed and flowed throughout the company’s history — was an initial winner following President Trump’s election win after CEO Elon Musk became one of Trump’s biggest backers on the campaign trail. Musk is now leading Trump’s government efficiency push.

Read more: How does Nvidia make money?

In a note to clients published late Sunday, RBC’s equity strategy team, led by Lori Calvasina, wrote that “investor, corporate, and political vibes have continued to weaken.”

“We continue to believe that the risk of a growth scare (14-20% drawdown peak to trough) in the S&P 500 has risen,” she wrote.

Mike Wilson, strategist at Morgan Stanley, said he sees the S&P 500 falling another 5% in a client note this weekend.

Earlier this month, strategists at Bank of America flagged the risk of a post-election “bro bubble” popping and argued that should the S&P 500 erase its post-election gains, “investors currently long risk would very much expect and need some verbal support for markets from policymakers.”

Speaking to reporters last Thursday, President Trump said, “I’m not even looking at the stock market,” an approach that is in contrast to his first term in office, when Trump embraced the stock market as a scorecard for the administration’s economic policy. Amid ongoing pressures from his burgeoning trade war, Trump on Sunday declined to rule out the possibility of a recession this year, saying the economy was in a period of “transition.”

This week, inflation data due out Wednesday will be the biggest update for investors looking to the Federal Reserve for signs the central bank might ease policy more aggressively than anticipated this year. Data on job openings due out Tuesday morning will add more color to the labor market picture, which appeared steadier than feared in Friday’s jobs report.



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