Billions wiped off tech stocks amid DeepSeek stunning AI advancements

Big Tech shares slump after AI start-up’s model raises questions about need for huge western hardware investment

DeepSeek has attracted increasing attention from investors since the company last week released its latest large language AI model showing a comparable performance to those of US rivals OpenAI and Meta. Photograph: Lam Yik/Bloomberg
DeepSeek has attracted increasing attention from investors since the company last week released its latest large language AI model showing a comparable performance to those of US rivals OpenAI and Meta. Photograph: Lam Yik/Bloomberg

Advances by China’s DeepSeek sow doubts about AI spending

Tech stocks tumbled on Monday after Chinese artificial intelligence start-up DeepSeek stunned Silicon Valley with advances apparently achieved with far less computing power than US rivals.

Shares in California-based Nvidia, one of the biggest beneficiaries of spending on AI chips, plunged 16 per cent, wiping out more than $600 billion (€572 billion) of market value. It was poised to surpass its own record for a one-day loss in market capitalisation, set back in September when it tumbled $279 billion in a day.

DeepSeek last week released its latest large language AI model, which achieved a comparable performance to that of US rival OpenAI, even though the company has previously claimed to use far fewer Nvidia chips.

READ MORE

Venture capital investor Marc Andreessen called the new Chinese model “AI’s Sputnik moment”, drawing a comparison with the Soviet Union stunning the US by putting the first satellite into orbit.

The results sent a shockwave through markets, as investors reassessed the likely future investment in AI hardware.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index lost 3.3 per cent, while the S&P 500 index declined 1.8 per cent. Microsoft fell 3.3 per cent. In Europe, chip equipment maker ASML fell 6.3 per cent, while Dutch semiconductor company ASM International dropped 12 per cent.

The rout extended well beyond traditional tech names. Siemens Energy, which supplies electrical hardware for AI infrastructure, plunged 20 per cent. Schneider Electric, a French maker of electrical power products that has invested heavily in services for data centres, fell 9.5 per cent.

To some, the sell-off in the companies making the “picks and shovels” of the AI revolution echoed the share-price crash of IT hardware company Cisco when the dotcom bubble burst.

Nvidia, Broadcom and other chipmakers have benefited from Silicon Valley’s race to build ever-larger clusters of chips, which the likes of xAI boss Elon Musk and OpenAI’s Sam Altman have argued are needed to keep advancing AI’s capabilities.

Nvidia’s chief executive Jensen Huang and Broadcom’s Hock Tan have argued in recent weeks that they expected the data centre building frenzy to continue until the end of the decade.

“It shows how vulnerable the AI trade still is, like every trade that is consensus and based on the assumption of an unassailable lead,” said Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet Asset Management.

But some Wall Street analysts and AI researchers have questioned the hype surrounding DeepSeek’s achievement. “It seems categorically false that ‘China duplicated OpenAI for $5 million’ and we don’t think it really bears further discussion,” wrote analysts at Bernstein in a note to clients.

Some researchers have even speculated that DeepSeek was able to take shortcuts in its own training costs by leveraging the latest models from OpenAI, suggesting that while it has been able to replicate the latest US developments very quickly, it will be harder for the Chinese company to pull ahead.

AI investment by large-cap US tech companies hit $224 billion last year, according to UBS, which expects the total to reach $280 billion in 2025. OpenAI and SoftBank announced last week a plan to invest $500 billion over the next four years in AI infrastructure.

Even following DeepSeek’s latest release, Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg said in a Facebook post on Friday that he planned to spend as much as $65 billion on AI infrastructure this year.

Founded by hedge fund manager Liang Wenfeng, DeepSeek last week released a detailed paper explaining how to build a large language model that could automatically learn and improve itself.

“It seems as if there is a bit of reality dawning that China has not been sitting idle, even as these tariffs and investment restrictions on tech companies have been put in place,” said Mitul Kotecha, Asia head of emerging markets macro and foreign exchange strategy at Barclays.

The US imposed stringent restrictions on chip exports to China under former President Joe Biden, banning the sale of Nvidia’s most advanced models to the country.

Some Chinese tech stocks advanced amid the excitement over DeepSeek, although the wider CSI 300 index closed down 0.4 per cent. In Hong Kong Baidu closed 4 per cent up and Alibaba was up 3 per cent. - Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025

  • Sign up for the Business Today newsletter and get the latest business news and commentary in your inbox every weekday morning
  • Opt in to Business push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
  • Join The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
  • Our Inside Business podcast is published weekly – Find the latest episode here