February 2026 index market overview: US momentum stalls as sector rotation takes hold
The global equity landscape in February 2026 is defined by a sharp contrast between a cooling US tech sector and resurgent international markets. While the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have struggled with fading upward momentum, broader indices like the FTSE 100 and the MSCI World (ex-US) are finding solid support elsewhere.
US markets face a critical crossroads
The dominant theme in US equities remains the evolving generative AI narrative. While the bull market that began in late 2022 remains intact for now, the S&P 500 has spent the last three months gyrating in a narrow 6,800–7,000 range.
Key US performance metrics (12 Feb 26)
- S&P 500: The index ended at 6,941, down 0.3% for the month but up 14.7% year over-year.
- Nasdaq: Closing at 25,201, this index saw a monthly decline of 2.1% while maintaining a 16.0% annual gain.
- Dow Jones: Outperforming the tech-heavy indices, the Dow rose 1.1% to 50,121, marking a 12.5% increase over the past year.
The great sector rotation: From Silicon Valley to Main Street
Investor sentiment is shifting as the "Magnificent Seven" experience mixed fortunes. While Nvidia (+2.9%) and Apple (+5.9%) strengthened this month, heavyweights like Amazon (-17.2%) and Microsoft (-15.3%) dragged the top ten companies lower. This has fueled a rotation toward smaller-cap stocks, evidenced by the equal-weighted S&P 500 rising 2.9% and the Russell 2000 up 1.4%.
Software shunned while hardware holds steady
The software sector is currently under extreme duress as investors question the viability of current business models in the face of generative AI.
- Software applications: S&P 500 software application firms slumped 24.3% MoM.
- Hardware demand: In contrast, semiconductor makers dominate the Nasdaq 100 gains. Robust demand for AI-focused memory chips has led to soaring prices for firms like SK Hynix (+345% YoY).
- The debt dilemma: Concerns are rising over "hyper-scalers" issuing massive debt to fund capital expenditure. Debt issuance by major tech firms reached USD 121bn in 2025, raising questions about the sustainability of share buyback programs.
International bourses: The FTSE 100 shines
Global markets considerably outperformed the US this month, aided by a weakening US dollar. The FTSE 100 has been a standout, posting a series of all-time highs and peaking at 10,481 in early February.
- FTSE 100 momentum: Up 3.3% MoM and 18.9% YoY, supported by M&A activity and attractive valuations.
- Asian markets: Performance was robust in Asia, led by a 15.8% surge in the Korean Kospi and an 11% gain for the Nikkei 225.
- European mixed bag: Germany's DAX40 rose 1.4%, though it remains constrained by weakness in software giant SAP SE, which fell 16.9% over the month.
Looking ahead: Economic calendar and key dates
The market’s direction in the coming weeks will likely hinge on inflation data and corporate earnings reports.
- Feb 25: NVIDIA earnings – Focus will be on the durability of the forward order book.
- Feb 26: US PCE Inflation (Dec) – Federal Reserve Chairman Powell indicated an expected rise of around 3% YoY.
- March 6: US Employment Report (Feb) – Following faster-than-expected non-farm payroll growth in January.
For the S&P 500 to sustain its bull run, the index needs to break above the 7,000 mark. Failure to do so, combined with a forward P/E of 22.2x (well above the post-millennium average), increases the odds of a correction.
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