Amid Nasdaq’s worst week since April and mounting volatility across tech stocks, State Street remains firmly optimistic about the long-term potential of AI-linked trades. For most investors, this moment feels like a test of faith in the “great growth narrative” that has powered markets all year. Yet, as we at NewsTrackerToday observe, the question has shifted – it’s no longer when the rally ends, but what shape its next phase will take.
State Street’s Chief Commercial Officer Anna Paglia told CNBC that despite macroeconomic headwinds, investor appetite for technology remains strong. “How can you not participate in the AI revolution? Everyone’s waiting for growth to rotate into value, but I don’t think that’s happening yet – the momentum is too strong,” she said. Her firm’s tech-focused ETFs have surged over 38% year-to-date, though they fell about 4% last week as investors took profits following a months-long run-up.
According to Liam Anderson, financial markets analyst at NewsTrackerToday, the current market environment represents “a rotation, not a reversal.” As he explains: “Tech – especially AI – remains the gravitational center of capital flows. Until the Fed signals a real policy pivot, investors will keep betting on innovation over austerity.” He views the brief pullback as an opportunity for institutional players to reenter the market at healthier valuations.
Meanwhile, other sectors are starting to stir. Todd Rosenbluth of CFRA Research pointed to renewed interest in healthcare stocks, a sector long out of favor but now showing defensive appeal. That trend echoes Paglia’s forecast that 2025 will be a year of strategic rebalancing. “Investors will increasingly look for diversification – not abandonment of tech, but balance,” she said. As Daniel Wu, geopolitical and energy expert, adds, “Technology is no longer just about profit margins – it’s becoming a pillar of national and economic security. But diversification is essential if markets are to avoid dependence on a single megatrend.”
State Street’s SPDR NYSE Technology ETF, whose second-largest holding is Palantir Technologies, saw its shares slide over 11% last week following an earnings report. Yet Paglia remains upbeat: the long-term AI story, she argues, is far from over – short-term fatigue is merely “a pause before the next wave of capital inflows.”
At NewsTrackerToday, we interpret this as more than a temporary market fluctuation. It’s a natural adjustment phase after a year of hyper-optimism. While mega-cap valuations have reached levels where even small corrections feel seismic, the underlying fundamentals – corporate AI adoption, infrastructure expansion, and integration of machine learning into business workflows – continue to strengthen the sector’s foundation.
Our outlook is clear: despite volatility, AI will remain the defining investment theme of 2025. The structure of growth, however, will evolve. The winners won’t be those shouting the loudest about artificial intelligence, but those embedding it deeply within their operational DNA. For investors, this is not a time for panic, but for recalibration. As we at News Tracker Today often note, the AI story isn’t ending – it’s simply entering its second, more mature chapter.