纳斯达克100指数有望迎来自4月崩盘以来最糟糕的一周。
Nasdaq 100 set for worst week since April meltdown

原始链接: https://fortune.com/2025/11/07/nasdaq-100-worst-week-since-april-bear-market-correction/

华尔街以“避险”姿态结束了本周,股市下跌,可能结束标普500指数连续三周上涨的行情。纳斯达克100指数跌幅尤为显著,受到高估值人工智能股票抛售的冲击,创下自4月以来最差一周表现。对不可持续估值和首席执行官的警告加剧了下跌。 加剧市场焦虑的是,一项关键的消费者信心指标跌至三年低点,由于政府停摆导致官方经济数据缺失,投资者容易受到私人报告的影响——包括关于劳动力市场降温的令人担忧的信号。 尽管股市下跌,但美国股票基金的资金流入连续第八周持续,但现金吸引了最多的投资。分析师认为,在当前的牛市中,此次回调可能是健康的,许多人仍然预计市场将进一步上涨,但需谨慎。美联储可能降息以支持就业,仍然是影响市场乐观情绪的关键因素。

## 纳斯达克100面临自4月以来最糟糕的一周,引发担忧 最近的Hacker News讨论集中在纳斯达克100可能面临自4月以来最糟糕的一周,引发了关于当前市场估值可持续性的争论,尤其是在人工智能领域。 一个主要担忧是人工智能公司能否提供回报来证明其巨额资本支出。人们将其与高频交易领域中代价高昂的光纤项目进行比较,强调了创新可能使昂贵的基础设施过时的风险。评论员强调投资的是*公司*,而不仅仅是*技术*,并警告称可能出现类似于互联网泡沫时代的泡沫破裂,在那个时代,选择合适的公司至关重要。 讨论还涉及市场修正的周期性以及人工智能驱动的增长可能由一种“庞氏骗局式”的计划推动,即收入增长依赖于持续投资。虽然有些人认为当前的市场行为是随机的,但另一些人认为修正是不可避免的,尤其是在人工智能公司难以将其进展变现的情况下。 还有关于稍后改变职业生涯进入金融业的简短讨论。
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原文

A risk-off week on Wall Street is drawing to a close, with some of the most-expensive areas of the market driving stocks lower while a renewed slide in crypto leaves the asset class barely up for 2025.

Equities fell on Friday, with the S&P 500 set to halt a streak of three weeks of gains as a gauge of US consumer sentiment sank to a more than three-year low. Things were even worse for the Nasdaq 100 as a rout in artificial-intelligence winners put the tech-heavy measure on track for its worst week since the April tariff-fueled tantrum – when the index entered a bear market.

Worries about valuations in AI high-flyers reaching unsustainable levels surfaced after a torrid surge from this year’s bottom spurred calls for a breather. Technical indicators started flagging reasons for caution, adding to the drag on sentiment from warnings by Wall Street chief executives about a frothy market.

“Major indices are facing selling pressure this week,” said Craig Johnson at Piper Sandler. “Investors should prioritize good risk/reward setups, potentially after a healthy pullback within this bull market.”

This week’s slide also comes at a time when earnings season is winding down, with investors becoming reliant on private data amid a dearth of economic figures due to the ongoing government shutdown. That’s left the market vulnerable to volatility as it happened in the previous session with a report painting a bleak jobs picture.

While the US payrolls report was not released this Friday due to the shutdown, a survey conducted by 22V Research showed that a labor-market unwind is the biggest risk to trading. That explains why risk assets and bond yields have been unusually sensitive to any news data on that front.

The S&P 500 fell to around 6,670. The Nasdaq 100 slid 1.1%. A gauge of the Magnificent Seven megacaps sank 1.8%.

Bitcoin extended this week’s slide to 9%. The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.09%. The dollar lost 0.2%.

“While there is no jobs report Friday due to the government shutdown, there is enough private payroll and layoff data to suggest that the labor market is cooling,” said Glen Smith at GDS Wealth Management. “This cooling keeps the Fed’s rate cut plans alive for December and potentially into early 2026.”

The economy remains on an upward trajectory even if economic growth slows toward trend levels in 2026, according to Seema Shah at Principal Asset Management.

“The bigger concern — and the key focus of the Fed’s debate  —will be the health of the labor market,” she said. “We anticipate the Fed will continue to implement rate cuts to prevent any weakness in employment from accelerating. Much of the market’s optimism hinges on the assumption that policymakers will maintain some level of support.”

Despite the slide, flows remain supportive. US equity funds had an eighth consecutive week of inflows, the longest streak this year, but cash attracted the bulk of inflows, Bank of America Corp. said citing citing EPFR Global data.

Traders are pondering a moment of weakness embedded in a multi-month rip higher for stocks, yet the market on balance looks poised for further gains, said Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Tony Pasquariello.

“I’m not saying that risk/reward is overly compelling, nor that this is an ideal location to add a bunch of incremental risk,” the head of hedge fund coverage at Goldman Sachs wrote in a note to clients Wednesday. “Looking forward, I’d argue the balance of risks still points in favor of the bulls.”

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