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Investors are rotating away from volatile technology stocks and moving into cheaper, smaller companies as market turbulence forces a reassessment of risk. After years in which megacap technology stocks dominated gains, recent sharp swings have prompted investors to look for shelter in areas that had long been overlooked.

The shift has been visible across major U.S. indexes. While the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached a record high, software stocks lost roughly $1 trillion in value over the week. Analysts say this reflects growing unease about concentrated exposure to technology and artificial intelligence-related names. Investors are increasingly questioning whether massive capital spending on AI will deliver the returns markets have priced in.

Smaller companies have benefited most from the rotation. The Russell 2000 index surged well ahead of larger benchmarks, reinforcing expectations that the rally could broaden into industrials, healthcare, dividend-paying firms, and equal-weighted strategies. Market strategists note that investors are seeking balance after years of crowding into the same high-growth trades.

Volatility has also hit other speculative assets, including precious metals and cryptocurrencies, strengthening the defensive tone. While technology shares staged a late rebound, many observers caution that doubts over AI profitability and elevated market swings suggest risk aversion will persist. The result is a more divided market, with investors quietly favoring energy, materials, staples, and industrial stocks over former market darlings.