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AI bubble fears trigger market rotation: What it means for crypto and tech stocks

The recent cooling of risk sentiment across global financial markets has sparked a pronounced defensive rotation, revealing a market grappling with conflicting signals on growth, monetary policy, and the sustainability of the AI-driven rally that has underpinned equity performance for much of the year. This shift lies in a confluence of macroeconomic data, corporate earnings uncertainty, and a reassessment of valuation premiums, particularly among the so-called Magnificent Seven tech stocks.

The S&P 500’s 1.6 per cent decline, which pushed it below its 100-day moving average, and the Nasdaq 100’s sharper 2.4 per cent drop underscore a growing investor wariness. This pullback occurred despite robust headline earnings from major technology firms, suggesting that earnings quality and forward guidance now matter more than top-line results alone. The market’s reaction reflects a maturing phase of the AI investment cycle, where speculative exuberance gives way to scrutiny over capital discipline and return on investment.

Nvidia’s post-earnings decline of 3.2 per cent, despite reporting record revenue of US$57 billion for the quarter ending October 2025, up 22 per cent from the prior quarter and exceeding its own guidance, highlights this tension. The company’s announcement of US$500 billion in AI chip orders for 2025 and 2026 combined speaks to immense underlying demand, yet investors are increasingly concerned about the pace and efficiency of capital deployment.

Analysts have begun questioning whether the current infrastructure build-out is inherently speculative, with data centre investments potentially outstripping near-term revenue generation. This scepticism has catalysed a broader reevaluation of AI-linked equities, triggering a selloff that spilt over into other risk assets, including cryptocurrencies. The market is no longer rewarding growth at any price. Instead, it demands proof of sustainable, profitable scaling.

This tech-driven equity weakness directly influenced the sharp deterioration in crypto market sentiment. Bitcoin fell 3.7 per cent during the session, and the broader crypto market shed 6.22 per cent in 24 hours, mirroring a four per cent intraday drop in the Nasdaq. The correlation between Bitcoin and the Nasdaq-100 has surged to 0.88, its highest level since March 2025, firmly re-establishing crypto’s role as a high-beta risk asset rather than a diversifying hedge.

This tight linkage means that any fear of an AI bubble or a broader tech valuation correction now directly translates into selling pressure on digital assets. The market has effectively priced in a future of unfettered AI growth, and any hint of a slowdown in hyperscaler spending or a more rational approach to capital expenditure is met with immediate repricing.

Also Read: Singapore crypto adoption hits new high as 61 per cent now hold digital assets

Compounding this sensitivity to equity market moves is a sudden and severe repricing of Federal Reserve policy expectations. The delayed release of the September US jobs report delivered a mixed but ultimately hawkish signal. While nonfarm payrolls showed a stronger-than-expected gain of 119,000 jobs, well above the 75,000 forecast, the unemployment rate simultaneously ticked up to 4.4 per cent, its highest level since late 2021. This combination of resilient job creation with a rising jobless rate, driven by an expanding labour force, has muddied the Fed’s data-dependent outlook.

The market has responded by aggressively pricing out the prospect of near-term monetary easing. The probability of a 25 basis point rate cut at the Fed’s December 10 meeting has collapsed to just 30 per cent, a sharp decline from the 55 per cent chance priced in a month earlier. This higher-for-longer rate environment increases the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like Bitcoin and elevates volatility across all risk markets, as evidenced by the VIX index sitting at 26.4.

This macro-induced risk aversion triggered a violent process of leverage unwinding in the crypto markets. As Bitcoin broke below the critical US$87,000 support level, a cascade of liquidations was set off, with over US$636 million in long positions being forcibly closed. This selling pressure was amplified by the fact that open interest in perpetual swap markets had recently risen by nearly five per cent to US$856.5 billion, indicating that traders had been adding leveraged long positions near the market’s peak.

The resulting feedback loop of margin calls and stop-loss triggers pushed the Fear & Greed Index into Extreme Fear territory at a reading of 11, its lowest point since March. This dynamic illustrates a key vulnerability in the current crypto market structure. High leverage in a low-liquidity environment can turn a modest price move into a full-blown panic, stripping away any illusion of its independence from traditional financial drivers.

In this climate of uncertainty, capital has rotated into traditional defensive sectors. Consumer Staples rose 1.1 per cent, led by a 6.5 per cent jump in Walmart’s share price, as investors sought refuge in stable, cash-generative businesses with inelastic demand. This flight to safety extends beyond equities, with gold holding firm above US$4,000 as a classic hedge against both economic slowdown and policy uncertainty. For investors, the implications are clear.

Also Read: AI stocks soar while crypto bleeds: What’s really driving the great market divergence?

A broad, diversified portfolio that extends well beyond the narrow leadership of the tech sector is now a prudent necessity. Being selective among the Mag7 is paramount, as not all AI plays are created equal, and the market is now differentiating between those with real earnings power and those riding on pure narrative.

Looking ahead, the critical questions hinge on the Federal Reserve’s next move and the long-term capital discipline of the tech giants. The December FOMC meeting is a pivotal event, and a failure to deliver the expected rate cut could unleash another wave of volatility. The more profound, unanswered question for the market’s structural health is whether the hyperscalers, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta, will maintain their current breakneck pace of AI-related capital expenditure into 2026. Their 4Q earnings calls will provide the first real glimpse into their 2026 guidance.

A decision to spend at a more measured, rational pace would be a sign of mature, shareholder-friendly discipline that benefits their own balance sheets. Such prudence would be a double-edged sword, as it would likely inflict significant pain on the vast ecosystem of downstream semiconductor, hardware, and software companies whose growth is entirely dependent on this torrent of spending.

The market’s current weakness is a reflection of its fear that the golden age of unconstrained AI capex may be coming to an end, forcing a painful but necessary reassessment of valuations across the entire technology and crypto landscape.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

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Culture-led marketing: Helping partners activate community moments at scale

e27 demonstrates how strategic partnerships and community-focused programming empowered over 400 SMBs to prepare for Ramadan in Kuala Lumpur.

Cultural moments shape how people connect, celebrate, and make decisions across Southeast Asia. For brands and partners operating in this diverse region, the opportunity is not just about seasonal timing. It is about understanding the communities they serve and showing up with relevance and respect. This is where e27 plays a critical role.

In January, e27 partnered with TikTok for Business in Kuala Lumpur to help more than 400 small and medium-sized business leaders prepare for Ramadan and Hari Raya. The event, Ramadan Ready for SMBs, was a showcase of how e27 enables partners to educate, engage, and activate business communities at scale. It demonstrated what happens when the right content, audience, and on-ground execution come together with precision.

Why cultural moments matter for Southeast Asia’s business ecosystem

Across Malaysia and the wider region, Ramadan is a moment of reflection, generosity, and community. It influences everything from purchasing habits to brand loyalty to how people engage online. Yet many SMBs lack access to the insights, frameworks, and best practices that larger organisations rely on.

Partners turn to e27 because this gap is exactly where e27 creates value. As a platform that connects Asia’s innovation ecosystem, e27 helps translate complex opportunities into accessible, practical knowledge for thousands of business owners. Cultural moments require both sensitivity and strategy. e27 provides the bridge between partners who have the expertise and communities who need guidance.

Also read: The mindset shift turning mobile growth into a self-sustaining loop

Inside Ramadan Ready for SMBs

The Kuala Lumpur event brought together more than 400 entrepreneurs, advertisers, and marketers for a day of programming designed to help SMBs navigate Ramadan campaigns with confidence. e27 curated a learning experience that integrated insights, real-world examples, and hands-on exercises.

TikTok SMB Account Managers Michelle Lau and Eric Chen led sessions on the importance of authenticity during Ramadan and how brands can craft stories that resonate with community values. They shared case studies of businesses that improved awareness, engagement, and sales by aligning messaging with reflection, generosity, and togetherness.

A panel featuring Nestlé and Applecrumby added another layer of depth. Speakers highlighted how short-form, visually compelling content helps brands participate in cultural conversations. They also stressed how collaborations with trusted creators strengthen community connection.

Workshops later in the day equipped attendees with practical strategies for optimisation, measurement, and creative development. Participants left with clear steps they could immediately apply to their upcoming Ramadan campaigns.

Also read: Marketing’s next big challenge? Making AI feel human

How e27 delivers impact for partners

From planning to on-site management, e27 ensured a seamless experience for both partners and attendees. Audience outreach was strategically designed to maximise participation. Communications were timed to support strong attendance, and the flow of the program was carefully coordinated to keep energy and engagement high throughout the day.

TikTok’s Daniel R. highlighted the quality of the collaboration, commending e27’s professionalism, proactivity, and project management. He noted that every detail, from pre-event coordination to on-ground execution, reflected the team’s readiness and capability. For partners like TikTok for Business, this level of delivery is essential. It ensures their expertise reaches the right audience and creates real impact within local business communities.

This is the value of e27’s partnership model. Whether through roundtables, webinars, or large-scale ecosystem events, e27 works closely with partners to amplify their knowledge, reach their audiences, and deliver programs that strengthen Southeast Asia’s innovation ecosystem.

Also read: Rethinking connection: Why belonging is the new currency of global teams

Looking ahead

The success of Ramadan Ready for SMBs showed how powerful community-first programming can be when guided by the right insights and executed with intention. It also reaffirmed e27’s role as a connector that brings partners and business communities together to learn, collaborate, and grow.

As brands prepare for Ramadan 2026 and other cultural milestones across the region, the lessons from this event will continue to influence how they build authentic and impactful campaigns. For partners, there is clear opportunity to replicate this model across new markets and moments. For e27, this is one example of how strategic partnerships can translate into meaningful outcomes for the wider ecosystem.

Interested in creating impact with us? Contact Innovate here.

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Ecosystem Roundup: SEA startups face shakeout; Ultragreen.ai eyes US$400M IPO; Trust drives SG e-commerce; Crypto adoption surges

In a fundraising climate defined by caution and shrinking liquidity, Southeast Asian founders are being forced to confront a truth the ecosystem has long avoided: exits don’t “happen” — they are engineered.

RETVRN Research’s State of Exits 2025 reinforces this shift, showing that most acquisitions occur far earlier than expected, often at or before Series A. That finding alone reframes how young companies must think about strategy. The path to a strong exit now begins at seed stage, not at scale.

The report’s emphasis on relationship-building is especially timely. With buyers highly selective, founders can no longer rely on last-minute interest or opportunistic outreach. The 18-24 month timeline for cultivating corporate relationships — and the need for five to seven active strategic conversations — highlights how exits are increasingly a process, not an event.

Perhaps the most revealing insight is how multidimensional “exit readiness” has become. Financial discipline, operational hygiene, timing awareness, and team alignment are now evaluated with near-institutional rigour. Weakness in any area can delay or depress outcomes.

Singapore’s growing infrastructure for structured exit preparation, including RETVRN’s local programme, signals a maturing ecosystem. In a market where capital scarcity demands discipline, founders who treat exits as core strategy rather than a distant milestone will define the region’s next cycle of innovation.

REGIONAL

Singapore’s surgical imaging firm Ultragreen.ai to raise US$400M IPO: The medical imaging company, which develops fluorescence-guided surgery technology and supplies indocyanine green dyes, aims to list on the Singapore Exchange Mainboard on December 3.

Temasek joins US$80m Series A in Singapore startup Amperesand: The funding will support the deployment of 30MW of its Medium Voltage Solid-State Transformer systems in 2026, aimed at AI data centers and critical power customers. Amperesand plans to expand engineering and manufacturing operations in the US and Singapore.

Vietnamese biotech startup Gene Solutions seeks US$100M pre-IPO: The company, which offers prenatal and cancer screenings using next-generation sequencing and AI, is considering listing in either Singapore or Hong Kong, according to CFO Keng Hsu.

Singapore’s e-commerce shift: Trust, not price, now drives loyalty: Milieu Insight reveals that the island nation’s online shoppers now prioritise trust, reliable service, and transparent value, signalling a shift from price-led loyalty to integrity-driven preferences.

Singapore crypto adoption hits new high as 61 per cent now hold digital assets: Singapore’s crypto market matures with rising long-term holders, modest portfolio allocations, and trust-driven platform choices despite persistent education and volatility concerns.

SGX, Nasdaq forge a global bridge for dual listings: The Global Listing Board will unify disclosure standards, cut costs, and enable large firms to raise capital efficiently across Singapore and the US.

Billease enters digital banking via rural bank buy: The acquisition of Rural Bank of Sta. Maria will enable the buy-now-pay-later company to introduce features including digital savings accounts, fund transfers, cash in, and cash out directly into the Billease app.

With US$6M in support, GenAI Fund aims to close the gap between AI innovation and corporate adoption: GenAI’s FastTrack programme connects innovators with corporates like Coca-Cola Vietnam, helping AI startups overcome cashflow hurdles, adoption delays, and product-market-fit challenges early.

Indonesia may block ChatGPT, Cloudflare over registration: Under regulations introduced in 2020, both foreign and local digital platforms must register before operating in Indonesia. Officials said that failing to register after receiving notification may lead to administrative sanctions, including access restrictions.

REPORTS, FEATURES & INTERVIEWS

Exit or be left behind: The harsh new reality for SEA startups: SEA’s valuation premiums now depend on early relationship building, disciplined operations, and exit-focused execution that starts years before negotiations begin.

Why Cambodia is becoming Southeast Asia’s most underrated tech frontier: Cambodia’s young digital-native population, rising infrastructure, and impact-focused investment funds are accelerating the country’s transformation into a compelling regional tech frontier.

From agritech to AI ops: 15 startups driving Philippines’s innovation shift (Part 2): The next wave of Philippine startups demonstrates how technology is streamlining operations, empowering communities, and opening new economic opportunities.

How East Ventures adopts materiality-driven ESG strategy for its portfolio companies: Its investment strategy fosters positive impacts and mitigates ESG risks. Through its ‘Doing Good’ approach, it evaluates its investments’ potential positive environmental and societal outcomes using a Theory of Change framework.

Bridging the valley of death: How C3H is powering the next wave of climate, health tech startups: As the climate crisis intensifies, technologies that address the intersection of climate and health are becoming increasingly urgent.

INTERNATIONAL

ChatGPT introduces global group chat feature: The feature allows users to collaborate with others and the AI in a single conversation. Users can add up to 20 people to a group chat by sharing a link, and group chats are kept separate from private conversations.

Baidu founder Robin Li casts AI as the driver of China’s ‘new productive forces’: The company is a major participant in China’s broader “AI Plus” initiative, which aims to integrate AI across sectors, and is also promoting its Ernie large language model as a flagship technology.

SoftBank to invest US$3B for OpenAI data centres: SoftBank, which previously sold a US$5.8B stake in Nvidia to fund its AI efforts, is working with OpenAI and Oracle on five US data centres for the US$500B Stargate project.

SEMICONDUCTOR

US charges four people over Nvidia chip smuggling to China: The indictment alleges that two Chinese nationals and two US citizens used a fake real estate company in Tampa, Florida, to ship graphics processing units through Malaysia to China without required US Commerce Department licenses.

TSMC receives US$4.7B in subsidies to support global expansion: Financial data showed TSMC secured US$154M in subsidies in Q3 2025, bringing the total for the first three quarters of 2025 to roughly US$2.31B, in addition to US$2.42B received in 2024.

SoftBank, TSMC stock fall after Nvidia drops in US: The selloff hit both major and smaller Asian chip firms, after Nvidia’s 3% drop overnight in the US, despite beating Wall Street expectations for Q3 and offering stronger Q4 guidance.

Nvidia CEO dismisses AI bubble fears after strong Q3 results: Investors have questioned whether the rapid investment in AI data centres could sustain long-term returns, with Nvidia at the centre of this trend due to soaring demand for its GPUs.

AI

Malaysian SMEs grapple with a growing “confidence gap” in AI adoption: Companies are drawn to AI tools that “solve today’s problems before tomorrow’s ambitions.” Only 47% associate AI with driving innovation, while a mere 33 per cent see it as a means for competitive differentiation.

Why the AI revolution depends on reinventing energy infrastructure: The world’s most advanced computation networks are running on infrastructure built for another era. Without rapid innovation at the intersection of energy and intelligence, the very systems driving the AI revolution could face their own energy ceiling.

How founder misalignment quietly erodes companies in the age of AI: When something feels off but not urgent, founders tend to deprioritise the check-in. Work continues. Deliverables move. The business looks healthy. And yet, momentum begins to decline in ways that are not easily measurable.

AI in action: How governments are using technology to predict, prevent, and personalise: AI is reshaping public services by making government more proactive while raising critical questions about fairness, accountability, and privacy.

A prettier you: How AI avatars make storytelling easier for midlifers: It is not about faking who you are. It is about saving time, money, and energy. Why spend hundreds on new clothes for one video when AI can give you a polished look at the click of a button?

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP

Crypto’s fragile comeback: Oversold RSI, Solana ETFs, and the US$86K Bitcoin test: Digital assets rose 1.93% after a steep decline, supported by Solana ETF inflows, Binance liquidity strength, and oversold technicals, though broader macro risk-off sentiment keeps the rebound tentative and fragile.

How network aggregators can thrive in a disconnected world: As globalisation slows and regionalisation accelerates, the new competition isn’t between countries, it’s between networks: Whoever can connect supply chains, talent pools, and markets fastest will dominate the next decade of trade.

Fractional CFOs: The missing link for startups struggling with finance: A fractional CFO brings structure, forecasting, investor reporting, and discipline, but at a fraction of the cost. They step in to build financial clarity, strengthen controls, and create a foundation for scalability.

Optimising AI frameworks for a decentralised AI (DeAI) future: The foundation of DeAI lies in robust AI frameworks that enable AI agents to operate in a decentralised environment. However, existing frameworks are not yet optimised for this shift. Here’s a list of the key challenges that AI frameworks face along with their solutions.

Will climate change force us to re-imagine travel in the future?: As Catalonia grapples with a drought emergency, the glaring dissonance between political priorities and pressing environmental challenges underscores the pressing need for meaningful action and collective resolve in confronting the existential threat of climate disruption.

Why Cambodia’s startup ecosystem is the next big bet for investors: Cambodia is one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. According to a 2023 IMF Report, its 6.1% real GDP growth projection ranked it 14th globally. In Sept. 2024, the ADB upheld its economic growth forecasts for Cambodia of 5.8% in 2024 and 6% for 2025.

How to spot the hidden gems: A guide for savvy angel investors: Seek founders who can eloquently articulate their vision, showcasing a profound understanding of the problem they intend to solve. It’s often these fervent founders who weather storms and inspire their teams to do the same.

Beyond unicorns: Building successful startup starts and ends with impact: With how fast the landscape is changing, it’s important for startups to be agile and resilient to be able to pivot when necessary but still keep impact at the core of every decision.

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Cove acquires Casa Mia Coliving to expand Singapore portfolio

Cove co-founders Guillaume Castagne and Luca Bregoli

Cove has announced the acquisition of Casa Mia Coliving for an undisclosed sum, adding around 500 fully furnished rooms to its Singapore network and strengthening its position in the city-state’s co-living market.

The deal brings Cove’s total to more than 2,000 rooms in Singapore and over 8,000 across Asia Pacific. The additional Casa Mia units, which are mainly located in central areas such as River Valley and Orchard, will expand the Cove Classics co-living range.

Cove said the purchase will also enhance its operational capacity through Casa Mia’s BCA-certified facility management team, which will join the company after the transaction closes.

Once the integration is complete, the combined business will operate under the Cove brand.

Cove expects the enlarged group to generate more than US$50 million in annualised rental income in 2025. The company stated that this represents approximately 50 per cent year-over-year growth in revenue and inventory, driven by both new openings and acquisitions.

Also Read: Ecosystem Roundup: SEA startups face shakeout; Ultragreen.ai eyes US$400M IPO; Trust drives SG e-commerce; Crypto adoption surges

Cove also said the acquisition will bring the business closer to being free cash flow positive. The company reported a profitable second half of 2025, despite significant spending to support its launches in Japan and South Korea.

Management said these results, combined with the Casa Mia deal, strengthen its financial position as it enters 2026.

Luca Bregoli, Co-Founder of Cove, said the acquisition aligns with the company’s focus on scale and efficiency. “This acquisition reinforces our leadership and commitment to the Singapore market … Integrating Casa Mia’s properties and team into our platform will drive significant operational synergies, while also enhancing our service delivery. This deal also unlocks additional resources to accelerate our expansion across the Asia Pacific.”

Casa Mia, founded in 2019, offers move-in-ready accommodation for young professionals. The company has reported strong margins and steady expansion during the past several years.

Co-Founder Eugenio Ferrante said the deal will support Casa Mia’s original goals. “We believe Cove offers the best possible home for our Casa Mia members and for us as a team, to continue our original mission of making it easy for young professionals to move to Singapore and find quality accommodation.”

Also Read: Why Cambodia’s startup ecosystem is the next big bet for investors

For current tenants and property partners of both brands, Cove said it expects a smooth transition with no changes to existing arrangements or service delivery.

Founded in 2018 by Guillaume Castagne and Bregoli, Cove is a flexible-stay platform offering long-, medium- and short-term rental options across Asia Pacific.

It operates in Singapore, Indonesia, South Korea and Japan, providing serviced accommodation aimed at residents seeking convenience and stability. Cove is backed by investors including Keppel, Eurazeo, Picus Capital, Venturra, Xander and Antler.

Image Credit: Cove

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Ronin, Coins.ph to bring stablecoin payments to 600K merchants in Philippines via QRPH

Ronin, the blockchain developed by Sky Mavis, is preparing to bring stablecoin payments into the Philippine mainstream through an integration that will allow PHPC (the peso-backed stablecoin launched by Ronin) to be used across the country’s QR payment network (QRPH).

The move, enabled through a deepened partnership with local crypto platform Coins.ph, would make the stablecoin spendable at more than 600,000 QRPH-enabled merchants, pending regulatory approval.

Also Read: QR payments: Southeast Asia’s digital lifeline or just a stepping stone?

The plan was announced at the YGG Play Summit and represents Ronin’s broader push to expand beyond gaming into digital payments, savings, and remittances across Asia Pacific.

QRPH is the backbone of the Philippines’s rapidly expanding digital payments ecosystem. Data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) shows that digital payments now account for 57.4 per cent of all retail transactions, while 66.4 per cent of person-to-merchant payments have already shifted online.

The Philippines also remains one of the world’s largest remittance destinations, receiving more than US$40.2 billion in 2024. Ronin and Coins.ph believe that this combination of high digital adoption and large capital inflows presents strong potential for on-chain payment rails.

“Once we secure the necessary permits, the integration of PHPC into the QRPH network by 2026 would be a game-changer. Soon, anyone will be able to pay with PHPC simply by scanning a QR code through Ronin Wallet, just like with other leading mobile wallets, but with the unprecedented speed and security of on-chain value,” said Wei Zhou, CEO of Coins.ph.

PHPC, launched in July 2024 under the BSP sandbox, is a Philippine peso-backed stablecoin with reserves managed by Coins.ph, a regulated virtual asset service provider.

Ronin previously outlined plans to support payments and remittances across Asia Pacific, positioning the Philippines — a long-standing hub of Web3 gaming — as a proving ground for real-world blockchain utility.

“This integration completes the loop that was foreshadowed back when merchants began accepting SLP and AXS for goods during the 2021 pandemic. Millions of Ronin Wallet users in the Philippines will soon have a seamless way to transmute in-game items and tokens into food, transportation costs, and the necessities of daily life,” said Jeffrey Zirlin, co-founder of Sky Mavis.

Also Read: Asia’s payment evolution: 5 trends shaping the 2025 landscape

Ronin Wallet, which today serves millions of users within the Axie Infinity ecosystem, is expected to broaden into payments, savings, and other financial use cases once PHPC becomes interoperable with QRPH. All deployment timelines remain subject to regulatory clearance.

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