The Ai Selloff Is Not About Technology. It's About Power.

The current selloff in software stocks is being described as an AI story. That description is convenient, but incomplete.



This is not a reckoning with artificial intelligence. It is a reckoning with leverage, narrative control, and who gets to own the future rents of productivity.

Markets are not punishing software because AI exists. Markets are punishing software because AI threatens to change who captures value and who merely distributes it.

That distinction matters more than most investors realize.

Why Software Is Being Treated as Guilty

For the last decade, enterprise software lived in a protected ecosystem. Subscription pricing, seat based licenses, and recurring revenue models created predictable cash flows. Predictability invited leverage. Leverage invited premium valuations.

Artificial intelligence breaks that loop.

If a single AI system can replace multiple workflows, then the number of users required to justify pricing collapses. If output is no longer proportional to logins, then the old metrics lose meaning. The market does not fear lower growth. It fears a loss of pricing authority.

This is why even strong earnings no longer reassure investors. Beating expectations is irrelevant if the expectations themselves are anchored to a model that may not survive the next product cycle.

Investors are not selling because results are bad. They are selling because results no longer answer the right question.

Why Hardware Is Winning and Software Is Losing

The current rotation is not subtle. Capital is flowing toward compute, chips, infrastructure, and energy. It is leaving application layers that once claimed defensibility through user dependence.

This is rational.

When uncertainty rises, markets favor ownership over abstraction. Hardware is constraint. Software is promise. In periods of disruption, markets pay for constraint first.

AI accelerates this instinct. The closer a company sits to physical limitation, the safer it feels. The farther it sits from the source of computation, the more fragile its economics appear.

This does not mean software is finished. It means software must prove something new.

The Real Risk Is Not AI Replacing Jobs

The real risk is AI compressing margins faster than companies can reprice their relevance.

If AI tools become embedded into platforms at the infrastructure level, application layer companies lose negotiating power. If customers no longer perceive switching costs, loyalty evaporates. If value becomes modular, brand weakens.

The market is not reacting to fear. It is reacting to a recalibration of bargaining power.

That recalibration is still ongoing.

What Comes Next

Over the next twelve to twenty four months, three things will determine which software companies survive the transition.

First, demonstrable ownership of proprietary data that improves with scale. Not access. Ownership.

Second, pricing models that align with output rather than presence. Investors will reward companies that abandon seat logic early rather than defend it too long.

Third, integration into workflows that AI cannot fully abstract away. Not because of technical limits, but because of regulatory, ethical, or institutional friction.

Companies that meet these criteria will recover. Companies that rely on inertia will not.

How Investors Should Think About This Moment

Do not frame this as panic or opportunity. Frame it as sorting.

This is what markets do when a new general purpose technology appears. They overcorrect, then they discriminate.

If you are investing today, ask yourself a simple question.

Does this company control a bottleneck that AI needs, or is it a surface that AI will eventually flatten.

That answer matters more than valuation multiples right now.

Markets do not fear intelligence. They fear losing the ability to charge for it.

When that fear appears, prices move before narratives catch up.

Those who stay calm when others demand certainty are usually the ones who see the next structure forming.


When a system changes, the first thing markets sell is the story they believed most deeply.

By Dr. Alan Mercer, PhD

 

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