Stocks Slide as Valuation Fears Hit Tech and Bitcoin Retreats

Paul Jackson

November 4, 2025

Key Points

  • Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) dropped nearly 2%, leading major indexes lower amid renewed valuation fears.

  • S&P 500 (^GSPC) lost 1.2%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) dipped 0.7%.

  • Bitcoin (BTC-USD) tumbled 6%, hovering just above $100,000, as liquidity concerns deepened during the ongoing U.S. government shutdown.

  • Palantir (PLTR) fell 7%, while Tesla (TSLA) slid 3% as Norway’s sovereign wealth fund moved to block Elon Musk’s $1 trillion pay plan.

  • Analysts warn that the market’s AI-driven rally may be due for correction, with earnings no longer justifying sky-high valuations.

Valuation Jitters Weigh on Wall Street

U.S. stocks fell sharply Tuesday as renewed anxiety over frothy market valuations hit investors still digesting a flood of corporate earnings.

The Nasdaq Composite led the decline, tumbling nearly 2%, followed by the S&P 500’s 1.2% slide and a 0.7% drop in the Dow.

After months of relentless gains fueled by artificial intelligence optimism and surging tech valuations, Wall Street appeared to hit a ceiling. Analysts at several major banks said the latest round of earnings has not matched the market’s elevated expectations, sparking fears of an overdue correction.

“There’s a growing disconnect between performance and pricing,” one strategist at JPMorgan said. “The fundamentals aren’t keeping up with the hype.”

Tech Stocks Lead the Decline

Tech shares were hit hardest, with Palantir (PLTR) dropping more than 7% despite beating estimates on both revenue and earnings. Analysts flagged its lofty price-to-earnings ratio as a key risk, echoing similar concerns around AI-heavy peers like Nvidia (NVDA) and Super Micro Computer (SMCI).

Uber (UBER) also slipped after reporting strong results that failed to meet bullish investor expectations.

Meanwhile, attention is shifting to AMD’s (AMD) highly anticipated quarterly report due after market close, where the chipmaker’s AI data center contracts will be in focus.

Tesla Faces Shareholder Pushback

Tesla (TSLA) dropped more than 3% after Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, one of the world’s largest institutional investors, announced it would vote against Elon Musk’s $1 trillion compensation package.

The move represents one of the most significant challenges yet to Musk’s pay plan and underscores growing corporate governance scrutiny in the tech sector.

Crypto and Commodities Retreat

In crypto markets, bitcoin (BTC-USD) fell 6%, hovering near the $100,000 level, as analysts cited waning liquidity and macro uncertainty stemming from the ongoing U.S. government shutdown.

The shutdown, now entering its 35th day, has delayed key economic data releases, including the monthly jobs report, leaving both Wall Street and the Federal Reserve without crucial indicators on employment and inflation trends.

Meanwhile, energy stocks (XLE) also weakened, with traders pricing in slower demand growth heading into 2026.

Sector Breakdown

  • Technology (XLK): Led declines amid overvaluation fears.
  • Consumer Discretionary (XLY): Weakened following cautious retail outlooks.
  • Industrials (XLI): Fell alongside broader macro sentiment.
  • Energy (XLE): Down on slowing demand projections.

WSA Take

Valuation fatigue has finally caught up to Wall Street. After months of AI-fueled exuberance, investors are starting to ask whether earnings growth can justify trillion-dollar market caps — especially as liquidity tightens and confidence wanes.

The market isn’t necessarily breaking — but the AI bubble narrative may be losing some of its air.

Read our recent coverage on Beta Technologies’ Debut on NYSE.
Explore more market insights on the Wall Street Access homepage.


Disclaimer:
Wall Street Access does not work with or receive compensation from any public companies mentioned. Content is for informational and educational purposes only.

Author

Paul Jackson

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