CNBC Daily Open: AI infrastructure stocks are taking a beating

CNBC Daily Open: AI infrastructure stocks are taking a beating


A trader works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., Dec.15, 2025.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

U.S. stocks of late have been shaky as investors turn away from artificial intelligence shares, especially those related to AI infrastructure, such as Oracle, Broadcom and CoreWeave.

The worry is that those companies are running into high levels of debt to finance their multibillion-dollar deals.

Oracle, for instance, said Wednesday it would need to raise capital expenditure by an additional $15 billion for its current fiscal year and increase its lease commitments for data centers. The company is turning to debt to finance all that.

The stock lost 2.7% on Monday, while shares of CoreWeave, its fellow player in the AI data center trade dropped around 8%. Broadcom also retreated over concerns over margin compression, sliding about 5.6%.

That said, major indexes were not too adversely affected as investors continued rotating into sectors such as consumer discretionary and industrials. The S&P 500 slipped 0.16%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average ticked down just 0.09% and the Nasdaq Composite, comprising more tech firms, fell 0.59%.

The broader market performance suggests that the fears are mostly contained within the AI infrastructure space.

“It definitely requires the ROI [return on investment] to be there to keep funding this AI investment,” Matt Witheiler, head of late-stage growth at Wellington Management, told CNBC’s “Money Movers” on Monday. “From what we’ve seen so far that ROI is there.”

Witheiler said the bullish side of the story is that, “every single AI company on the planet is saying if you give me more compute I can make more revenue.”

The ready availability of clients, according to that argument, means those companies that provide the compute — Oracle and CoreWeave — just need to make sure their finances are in order.

— CNBC’s Ari Levy contributed to this report.

What you need to know today

And finally…

Customers walk in the parking lot outside a Costco store on December 02, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois.

Scott Olson | Getty Images



Source

For car, phone, even tractor owners, a populist wave is rising to end the ‘captive’ repair economy
Technology

For car, phone, even tractor owners, a populist wave is rising to end the ‘captive’ repair economy

Ohio gubernatorial candidate Casey Putsch speaks with supporters at a campaign event in Toledo, Ohio, on Thursday, April 9, 2026. He is far behind in the polls, but Putsch is part of a nationwide message of economic populism and is promoting “right to repair” legislation. Sue Ogrocki | AP It used to be that if […]

Read More
Wall Street is getting bullish on neoclouds. These stocks hold more risk than other AI plays
Technology

Wall Street is getting bullish on neoclouds. These stocks hold more risk than other AI plays

There’s a lot of market buzz on the emerging crop of companies known as neoclouds, but these stocks are not for the faint of heart. Neoclouds are building AI-dedicated computing infrastructure and represent the risky edge of artificial intelligence investing. They stand in contrast to the hyperscalers, such as Amazon Web Services , Google Cloud […]

Read More
We tried out xAI’s Grok chatbot while driving a Tesla in NYC. Here’s what happened.
Technology

We tried out xAI’s Grok chatbot while driving a Tesla in NYC. Here’s what happened.

Tesla owner Mike Nelson has been using the AI chatbot Grok in his vehicle for several months now. He finds it is useful, nearly irresistible, and dangerous. Nelson, a lawyer with a background in auto insurance, showed CNBC how he uses Grok on a drive around the New York metro area. Nelson said that while […]

Read More