In mid-February 2026, a significant “AI scare trade” has rippled through Wall Street, causing a sharp sell-off in real estate and logistics stocks. The catalyst was a series of AI product launches, most notably a new white paper and tool from Algorhythm Holdings (NASDAQ: RIME), which investors fear could dismantle high-margin, labor-intensive brokerage models.
Between February 11 and 13, 2026, major real estate service firms saw their steepest declines since the 2020 pandemic.
The Catalyst: Algorhythm’s “SemiCab” Launch
On February 12, 2026, Algorhythm Holdings—a former consumer electronics firm that pivoted to AI—announced that its SemiCab platform was achieving unprecedented productivity gains.
The Claim: The company reported that live deployments allowed customers to quadruple freight volumes (300%–400% increase) without adding any operational headcount.
Market Reaction: While Algorhythm’s own stock surged nearly 30%, the news triggered a “contagion of fear” across other service-based sectors. Investors extrapolated that if AI could automate complex logistics orchestration, the high-fee world of commercial real estate (CRE) brokerage was the next logical target.
Stock Market Impact: The “Real Estate Rout”
The sell-off hit the largest names in real estate services as traders weighed the vulnerability of traditional commission structures to AI automation.
| Company | 2-Day Stock Performance (Feb 11–13) | Market Sentiment |
| CBRE Group (CBRE) | -20.0% (Worst since 2008) | Fear of margin compression in high-fee services. |
| Zillow Group (ZG) | -17.1% | Concerns over AI bypassing traditional agent roles. |
| Cushman & Wakefield | -13.8% | Anxiety over automated property valuations/marketing. |
| Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) | -12.5% | Vulnerability of “information asymmetry” fee models. |
| Compass (COMP) | -12.2% | Disruption of human-centric residential moats. |
The Analyst View: Structural Shift or Overreaction?
The 2026 “SaaSpocalypse” (a term coined following recent Anthropic and OpenAI launches) has led to a fundamental re-underwriting of business quality.
The Bear Case: Analysts at Jefferies and Morningstar noted that AI “compresses the information gap” that justifies 6% real estate commissions and high AUM fees. If AI makes the work cheaper to produce, investors assume consumers will eventually pay less for it.
The Bull Case: Industry veterans, including AWS CEO Matt Garman, have called the fear “overblown.” They argue that complex deal-making, local market insight, and human negotiation remain “durable moats” that an algorithm cannot yet replicate.






