Tech stocks are falling primarily due to two converging pressures: escalating concerns over AI regulation and rising 10-year Treasury yields reaching 4.8%. Major tech companies have shed $1.2 trillion in market value over the past month, with the Nasdaq Composite down 12% as investors rotate into safer assets offering higher guaranteed returns.
The selloff accelerated after the EU’s AI Act implementation and proposed U.S. legislation targeting algorithmic transparency. Nvidia dropped 18%, Microsoft fell 14%, and Meta declined 16% as regulatory uncertainty clouds future AI monetization strategies.
What Is Causing Tech Stocks to Decline Right Now?
The primary catalyst is the interest rate environment. When Treasury yields rise above 4.5%, high-valuation growth stocks become less attractive because investors can achieve decent returns with minimal risk. Tech stocks, which trade at average P/E ratios of 35x compared to the S&P 500’s 21x, are particularly vulnerable to this dynamic.
According to Goldman Sachs analyst David Kostin, “Every 50 basis point increase in yields historically compresses tech multiples by 8-10%.” This mathematical relationship is playing out precisely as predicted.
How Are AI Regulation Concerns Impacting Valuations?
New regulatory frameworks in Europe and proposed U.S. bills are creating uncertainty around AI business models. Companies face potential compliance costs estimated at $2-5 billion annually and restrictions on data usage that could limit AI capabilities. This regulatory overhang has added a 15-20% “uncertainty discount” to AI-focused tech stocks, according to Morgan Stanley research.