The first quarter of 2026 was the moment the market stopped treating technology as a monolith. Beneath the big tech selloff grabbing headlines, a violent dispersion has been bubbling beneath. Tech stocks have retreated 10% this year, trailing only the rate-sensitive financials as the second worst-performing sector. February’s “SaaSpocalypse” – fueled by fears that Agentic AI will decimate software seat counts – triggered a massive valuation wipeout. The tech market has splintered, and software is living in its own universe.
AI spending has quickly become the $720 billion question. That’s how much Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta and Oracle are expected to spend on AI development in 2026 alone. But the market has officially transitioned out of the 2023–2024 “AI euphoria” and is now losing patience. Such massive infrastructure outlays have heightened concerns that returns may take years to materialize, if at all. This is an extended period of uncertainty that investors are increasingly unwilling to tolerate.
The Software Scare: Valuation vs. Reality
In the wake of the software sell-off, the sector has completely decoupled from the hardware trade. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) is down roughly 30% from its peak, with heavyweights like Salesforce, Adobe and HubSpot facing a brutal multiple compression. High-growth SaaS names that started the year trading at 35x forward earnings are now being priced in the low 20s, drifting toward traditional “utility-like” valuations.
However, the flow data tells a story of institutional “bottom-fishing.” Despite the price drop, IGV has garnered $2 billion haul in March alone. With $1 billion of that arriving in a single week this month, it suggests that while momentum traders have fled, value-oriented institutions believe the sector has hit a double-bottom. But software earnings have been strong and analysts have actually raised full-year earnings estimates, making this a potential generational entry point for those betting on an oversold “knee-jerk” reaction.
Perhaps the most telling stat is the valuation gap: The Nasdaq P/E vs. S&P 500 P/E ratio has collapsed to a multi-year low. The difference is now less than 2 points, down from historical highs of 10. As the Nasdaq begins to trade more like a cyclical growth index and less like a speculative moonshot, the fragmentation of the tech market is forcing a reality check.
S&P 500 vs. Nasdaq Forward P/E Spread (5 Years)
Source: Bloomberg, Citadel Securities
The Hunt for Hardware
The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) emerged as a key momentum proxy — driven in large part by its ~20% weighting in Nvidia — drawing nearly $4 billion in inflows despite trading roughly flat on the year. Even so, semis haven’t been immune. Nvidia’s valuation has compressed to the point where it now trades at a forward P/E below that of ExxonMobil.
Flows into hardware ETFs have been equally telling. ETFs tied to technology hardware and infrastructure have attracted about $5 billion year-to-date, with nearly half of that coming in March alone. The demand extends beyond chips to the broader physical backbone of AI, with funds like the iShares AI Innovation and Tech Active ETF (BAI) and the First Trust NASDAQ Clean Edge Smart Grid Infrastructure Index Fund (GRID) each pulling in roughly $2 billion, underscoring continued conviction in AI infrastructure.
Other Ways to Play the Tech Trade
Elsewhere, the search for safety has led to two distinct trends:
- Shock Absorbers: Income as a Buffer. The J.P. Morgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPQ) continued its dominance, absorbing over $10 billion in the first quarter. The fund’s strategy of tech exposure plus options income was perfectly calibrated for the quarter’s choppy, range-bound markets. The NEOS Nasdaq-100 High Income ETF (QQQI), which uses a data-driven call option strategy, has also taken in nearly $3 billion in net inflows year-to-date, thanks to strong inflows in March.
- The New Thematic: Defense and Drones. Investors are dumping the “middle” of the software stack and piling into defense and drones. The Global X Defense Tech ETF (SHLD) has seen $3 billion year-to-date. Notably, the iShares Defensive Industrials Active ETF (IDEF) emerged as the single most-bought ETF by retail investors in March, according to recent Nasdaq data.
The blistering half a billion in total first-quarter inflows masks a violent structural shift where investors are no longer buying technology for its growth potential alone, but for its role in the global physical and digital infrastructure. In 2026, the successful investor isn’t the one who found the next big thing, but the one who accurately mapped the friction between the AI dream and its multibillion-dollar reality.
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