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Dip-buyers go missing as software selloff slams stocks

Dip-buyers go missing as software selloff slams stocks

FILE PHOTO: A trader works inside a booth on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., November 21, 2025. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

05 Feb 2026 02:43AM (Updated: 05 Feb 2026 11:30AM)

NEW YORK: The software sector's deepening selloff on Wednesday (Feb 4) failed to lure bargain hunters, with the dip-buying reflex that has rescued countless tech routs conspicuously absent.

After a broad selloff on Tuesday that saw the S&P 500 software and services index fall nearly 4 per cent, the sector slipped another 1 per cent on Wednesday, down for a sixth-straight session, extending a decline that has shifted from AI optimism to disruption fears. 

Unlike other recent market slides, where investors have been quick to snap up battered shares, the worst selloff in the sector since 2022, when rising rates hammered software stocks, invited few buyers.

"In general, our customers have not been as eager to buy dips in software as they are for precious metals and semis," Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, said.

"While it’s possible that our clients are buying dips in software, it is by no means in the forefront of their activity," he said.

Options traders also showed a lack of appetite for scooping up the battered software names.

"Software continues to trade heavy, and the options flow remains overwhelmingly defensive," Chris Murphy, co-head of derivative strategy at Susquehanna Financial, noting defensive activity in the options on iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF and ARK Innovation ETF. 

IGV shares were down 3 per cent, while the ARKK ETF fell nearly 7 per cent. 

"In IGV and ARKK, we’ve seen traders pressing downside exposure rather than stepping in with dip-buying interest," Murphy said.

In general, the tone in software remains defensive, he added.

 

Santosh Rao, head of research at venture capital firm Manhattan Venture Partners, said markets are uneasy about the heavy spending by tech companies and want clearer evidence of returns on investment. 
 
He told CNA's Asia First that "the path of least resistance is down", weighing on stocks across the board.
 
Rao noted that the spending is necessary to avoid falling behind competitors but is likely to pay off over the longer term.
 
"It'll pay off down the road, but they have to spend now. If not, they're going to fall behind, so expect more and more spending," he said. 
 
He added that a longer-term perspective shows companies are investing in the right priorities, helping to ease concerns about heavy capital outlays.

Interactive Brokers' Sosnick said Microsoft, while not purely a software company, was one notable exception to the generally bearish tone in the sector, with the company drawing buyers. 

Microsoft shares, down about 15 per cent since the company reported results on January 28, were up about 1 per cent on Wednesday.

Still, short sellers, who aim to sell borrowed shares to buy them back at a profit, were emboldened by the sharp declines in the sector.

These traders were selling shares even as stocks came under pressure, Leon Gross, research analyst at S3 Partners, said.

"Historically, Microsoft behaves like a reversal stock, with shorts covering on the way down. Now it is trading like a momentum‑driven, distressed name, with shorts increasing into weakness," Gross said, noting that Microsoft short interest had increased by about 20 per cent over the past week.

Source: Reuters/ca
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