Wall Street offered a downbeat performance last week, with the S&P 500 losing about 1.4%, the Dow Jones retreating about 1.2%, the Nasdaq Composite plunging about 2.1%, and the Russell 2000 shedding about 0.9%.
AI Fear Trade
Fears around the likely ability of artificial intelligence (AI) to disrupt businesses continued last week and spread beyond the tech and software sectors.Several industries, including real estate services and financials, have been hit hard in recent days (read: AI Disruption Hit Multiple Sector ETFs: Is the Fear Overblown?).
Great Rotation in Focus
Wall Street started witnessing the “Great Rotation,” with investors shunning hot technology stocks in favor of smaller companies and other defensive sectors. The combination of “AI capex fatigue,” a resilient U.S. economy, and chances of a less-dovish Fed in the near term has led to the rotation in the market.
Investors have started demanding clearer returns on massive spending after two years of AI capex euphoria. Second, higher interest rates — with the 10-year Treasury yield over 4% — are pressuring long-duration growth valuations, pushing investors toward defensive and value sectors that normally fare better in higher-rate environments.
Upbeat Jobs Data
Nonfarm payrolls rose by a greater-than-expected 130,000 jobs in January, following a downwardly revised 48,000 increase in December. The U.S. unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3% in January 2026 from 4.4% in December, coming in slightly below market expectations of 4.4%, per Trading Economics. The economy added just 181,000 jobs in 2025.
Gold Price Under Pressure?
SPDR Gold Trust GLD added only 0.4% last week. Resilient labor market conditions reinforce the Fed’s confidence in the economy, allowing policymakers to maintain elevated rates to tackle inflationary fears. The benchmark U.S. treasury yield fell to 4.04% on Feb. 13, 2026, from 4.22% recorded on Feb. 9, 2026. Bullion, in turn, is pressured by high interest rates due to its non-yielding nature.
Rally in Japan ETFs
On the international front, Japan ETFs deserve mention. These ETFs rallied as Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s landslide election victory on Feb. 8, 2026, strengthened expectations for pro-growth policies, including fiscal stimulus, tax reforms and deregulation.
The supportive fiscal policy could accelerate corporate earnings and economic expansion. This, along with improved growth forecasts from the Bank of Japan, has boosted investor sentiment toward Japanese equities. iShares MSCI Japan ETF EWJ gained about 3.9% last week (read: Japan ETFs Soar on "Takaichi Trade": Top-Performers in Focus).
ETFs in Focus
Against this backdrop, below we highlight a few winning exchange-traded funds (ETFs) of last week.
iShares U.S. Digital Infrastructure and Real Estate ETF IDGT – Up 10%
WisdomTree Cybersecurity Fund WCBR – Up 8.5%
Virtus Reaves Utilities ETF UTES – Up 7.9%
Breakwave Dry Bulk Shipping ETF BDRY – Up 7.9%
Matthews Korea Active ETF MKOR – Up 7.6%
iShares MSCI Global Gold Miners ETF RING – Up 5.8%
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SPDR Gold Shares (GLD): ETF Research Reports iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ): ETF Research Reports iShares MSCI Global Gold Miners ETF (RING): ETF Research Reports Virtus Reaves Utilities ETF (UTES): ETF Research Reports WisdomTree Cybersecurity Fund (WCBR): ETF Research Reports iShares U.S. Digital Infrastructure and Real Estate ETF (IDGT): ETF Research ReportsThis article originally published on Zacks Investment Research (zacks.com).
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