Tech stocks are falling in 2026 because AI valuations have hit a reality wall. After years of explosive growth, investors are questioning whether companies can deliver profits matching their sky-high price tags. The Nasdaq has dropped 12% since January, with AI-focused stocks leading the decline.
What’s Triggering the Tech Stock Selloff?
Three factors are driving the decline. First, AI revenue growth is slowing—Microsoft reported a 22% quarter-over-quarter deceleration in AI services revenue in Q1 2026. Second, interest rates remain elevated at 4.75%, making high-growth tech stocks less attractive. Third, regulatory scrutiny intensified after the EU’s AI Liability Directive took effect in March 2026, creating compliance costs analysts estimate at $2-5 billion annually for major tech firms.
Which Companies Are Hit Hardest?
Nvidia dropped 28% from its peak, while Tesla fell 31% as autonomous driving timelines extended. Meta and Alphabet each declined 18-20%. Smaller AI startups face worse conditions—venture funding for AI companies dropped 43% year-over-year according to PitchBook data.
Should Investors Buy the Dip or Stay Cautious?
Look for companies with actual AI revenue, not just promises. Microsoft and Google still generate real cash flow from AI products. Avoid pure-play AI stocks trading above 15x sales. The correction separates sustainable businesses from hype. Dollar-cost averaging into quality names makes sense, but expecting a quick recovery is unrealistic—previous tech corrections took 18-24 months to bottom.