Apple Breaks Away From Nasdaq Amid AI Market Turbulence
Apple Inc. has become increasingly detached from its tech peers, offering investors a rare refuge from the volatility driven by artificial intelligence. The company’s 40‑day correlation with the Nasdaq 100 fell to 0.21, its lowest since 2006, down sharply from 0.92 in May 2025. This shift reflects Apple’s decision to largely avoid the AI spending race, setting it apart from rivals pouring billions into infrastructure and tools.
Analysts see this independence as a strength. “Apple’s lack of correlation is 100% a positive right now,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth, noting that investors are caught in an “AI whack‑a‑mole” cycle—uncertain whether massive AI investments will pay off or disrupt entire industries. Apple, meanwhile, faces neither risk: it isn’t spending heavily on AI, nor is it vulnerable to disruption from emerging tools.
Despite challenges integrating AI into its products, Apple is reportedly accelerating work on three AI‑powered devices. Its fundamentals remain strong: last quarter brought record sales, driven by iPhone demand, and the company issued a better‑than‑expected outlook. A product launch event is expected soon.
The market impact is clear. On February 17, Apple gained 3.2%, while the Nasdaq 100 slipped 0.1%—the third time this month Apple outperformed the index by at least three points. For February, Apple is up 1.7%, compared with a 3.2% decline for the Nasdaq 100 and a 7.2% drop for the Magnificent Seven Index, marking its worst month since March.
Apple’s divergence highlights its role as a stabilizing force in a market otherwise dominated by AI‑driven uncertainty.
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Apple Breaks Away From Nasdaq Amid AI Market Turbulence
Apple Inc. has become increasingly detached from its tech peers, offering investors a rare refuge from the volatility driven by artificial intelligence. The company’s 40‑day correlation with the Nasdaq 100 fell to 0.21, its lowest since 2006, down sharply from 0.92 in May 2025. This shift reflects Apple’s decision to largely avoid the AI spending race, setting it apart from rivals pouring billions into infrastructure and tools.
Analysts see this independence as a strength. “Apple’s lack of correlation is 100% a positive right now,” said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth, noting that investors are caught in an “AI whack‑a‑mole” cycle—uncertain whether massive AI investments will pay off or disrupt entire industries. Apple, meanwhile, faces neither risk: it isn’t spending heavily on AI, nor is it vulnerable to disruption from emerging tools.
Despite challenges integrating AI into its products, Apple is reportedly accelerating work on three AI‑powered devices. Its fundamentals remain strong: last quarter brought record sales, driven by iPhone demand, and the company issued a better‑than‑expected outlook. A product launch event is expected soon.
The market impact is clear. On February 17, Apple gained 3.2%, while the Nasdaq 100 slipped 0.1%—the third time this month Apple outperformed the index by at least three points. For February, Apple is up 1.7%, compared with a 3.2% decline for the Nasdaq 100 and a 7.2% drop for the Magnificent Seven Index, marking its worst month since March.
Apple’s divergence highlights its role as a stabilizing force in a market otherwise dominated by AI‑driven uncertainty.
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