The tech sector has experienced significant volatility in recent months, with major technology stocks declining sharply from their 2021 peaks. While not a singular “crash” event, the tech market has seen sustained corrections: the Nasdaq Composite fell over 33% from November 2021 to December 2022, and renewed volatility emerged in 2024 amid AI bubble concerns and rising interest rates. Companies like Meta, Amazon, and Tesla saw market capitalizations drop by hundreds of billions during peak selloff periods.
Multiple factors triggered the tech decline: aggressive Federal Reserve interest rate hikes made growth stocks less attractive, overvaluation concerns in AI-related equities, and disappointing earnings from major players. Rising bond yields particularly hurt unprofitable tech companies that relied on cheap capital. Regulatory scrutiny on big tech and geopolitical tensions with China added pressure.
High-growth, unprofitable companies suffered most severely. Meta lost over 70% of its value at its 2022 low, while Tesla dropped 65% from peak. Cryptocurrency-exposed tech firms like Coinbase plummeted over 80%. Even giants like Apple and Microsoft saw 20-30% corrections, erasing trillions in combined market value.
While painful, this downturn differs from the 2000 dot-com bubble. Today’s tech companies generally have real revenue and profits, unlike many 2000-era startups. The Nasdaq fell 78% from 2000-2002 versus roughly 33% in the 2022 correction, though volatility continues into 2024.
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