Magnificent Seven’s sharp losses test US stock market’s strength
Magnificent Seven’s sharp losses test US stock market’s strength
The Magnificent Seven—Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla—were the undisputed champions of the US stock market’s dramatic rally out of the 2022 bear market. Powered by investor confidence in their AI leadership and financial resilience, they lifted indexes to record highs. However, in 2025, these same giants are struggling, and their stumbles are posing a major test for broader markets, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Even after a strong four-day rally last week, the group is enduring its worst start to a year since the 2022 downturn, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Each stock has dropped more than 6.5%, collectively erasing $2.5 trillion in market value. The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF surged 13% during the rally, but remains down around 15% this year.
Trade war and AI disruption hit tech’s dominance
The trouble began early in 2025, when the emergence of DeepSeek’s AI model challenged US tech companies’ perceived leadership in artificial intelligence. Compounding the damage, US President Donald Trump’s escalating global trade war has rattled investor confidence in “American exceptionalism”—the belief that the US economy and tech innovation were unmatched. Meanwhile, company-specific setbacks have also added pressure.
“From Magnificent to Maleficent, it’s just become a massive challenge,” said Matt Orton, head of market strategy at Raymond James Investment Management, referencing the fairy-tale villain from Sleeping Beauty. “Some of the shine has been lost with respect to the story. It was only a matter of time.”
Earnings season brings high-stakes updates
Investors are closely watching earnings results due this week from Meta, Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon, with Nvidia’s report expected in late May. After dominating market returns, the group’s recent struggles have highlighted a long-standing fear: that the US stock market had become too reliant on a handful of giant tech firms. At their peak in December, the Magnificent Seven made up about 36% of the S&P 500’s total market value.
Their downturn has had an outsized impact. The S&P 500’s total return, including dividends, is down 5.7% so far this year. Without the Magnificent Seven, it would be down just 1.2%, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite is officially in a bear market, down more than 20% from its recent high and still off 10% this year.
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“When the generals fall, people tend to get nervous,” said Katie Stockton, founder and managing partner at Fairlead Strategies, describing the market’s growing anxiety.
Growth slowdown looms for tech giants
Adding to the concern, earnings growth for the Magnificent Seven is forecast to slow significantly. Analysts polled by FactSet predict a 16% rise in profits for the group in 2025, down from about 37% last year. Meanwhile, earnings for the rest of the S&P 500 are expected to climb 7.8%, up from 5% in 2024.
Each company is facing its own hurdles. Tesla reported a 71% drop in net income in the first quarter, grappling with declining car sales and mounting competition, while facing political controversy over CEO Elon Musk’s role in the Trump administration. Nvidia’s shares slumped after it warned of a $5.5 billion hit due to new US export curbs on China. Apple is battling weaker iPhone sales and delays in AI feature rollouts. Alphabet is bracing for pressure on Google’s ad business following changes to tariff rules.
Valuations remain stretched despite declines
Despite their declines, some analysts argue that the Magnificent Seven’s valuations remain lofty. Nvidia, for instance, is trading at 23 times projected earnings over the next year, down from 31 times at the beginning of 2025 but still well above broader market levels. Meta trades at a multiple of 21, compared to the S&P 500’s overall 20.
This situation echoes 2022, when tech stocks, then known collectively as FAANG (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google), cratered after the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates. After a brief comeback in 2023, Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett coined the “Magnificent Seven” nickname to reflect the tech sector’s reshaped leadership.
Analysts remain cautiously optimistic
Hartnett, who watched the 1960 film The Magnificent Seven every Christmas as a child, has since joked that the group should now be called “Lagnificent.” Nonetheless, he remains confident that their dominance will eventually reassert itself.
“At the end of the day, nobody wants to own bonds,” Hartnett said. “There’s only so much gold and European equities or emerging markets. And so it’s almost by default, you go back to the US equity market.”
As the Magnificent Seven stumble, the stakes for the broader market—and for investors counting on a tech-led recovery—have rarely been higher.