Apple Sheds $230 Billion From Intraday Peak After Long-Awaited Siri AI Reveal Disappoints
Key Takeaways
Apple stock reversed from a ~$317 intraday high to close at $301.54 on June 8, a roughly 4.95% swing.The drop wiped about $230 billion off Apple’s peak valuation as its Siri AI reveal underwhelmed Wall Street.Apple unveiled a Google-powered AI Siri and rebuilt Apple Intelligence platform at WWDC 2026.
A ‘Sell the News’ Moment for Apple’s AI Reset
Apple used its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 8 to unveil its biggest artificial intelligence (AI) push yet, i.e. a rebuilt, AI-powered Siri and an expanded Apple Intelligence platform spanning its devices. Investors were not impressed because after climbing as high as about $317 a share during the event, the stock reversed and closed at $301.54, down 1.89% on the day, but nearly 4.95% below its intraday peak.
That swing translated into roughly $230 billion erased from the company’s high-water valuation, a figure widely circulated across markets. Strategists chalked the reversal up to a classic “buy the rumor, sell the news” response since expectations for Apple’s AI strategy had been building for months.
The WWDC 2026 announcements amounted to a reset after two years of stumbles around Apple’s AI ambitions. Rather than going it alone, Apple leaned on a partnership with Google to power the next generation of Siri, a notable concession from a company that has long marketed its in-house silicon and software stack. The new Siri promises more conversational, context-aware responses, while the broader Apple Intelligence platform threads generative features through iOS and Apple’s other operating systems.
For all the engineering on display, the market’s verdict was that Apple is playing catch-up. The cautious response stood in sharp contrast to the enthusiasm surrounding pure-play AI firms, even revealing how high the bar has become for incumbents trying to prove they can compete in a field now defined by OpenAI, Anthropic and Google.
Why a Big-Tech Selloff Matters to Crypto
Apple is not a crypto company, but its stumble has rippled into digital-asset markets all the same. This is because AI and crypto have become tightly correlated trades over the past 24-months, both feeding on the same pools of liquidity and the same appetite for high-growth risk.
The timing is striking as well, given Apple’s reveal landed the same week OpenAI confidentially filed for a blockbuster IPO and just after Anthropic filed its own confidential S-1 targeting a $965 billion valuation. Meanwhile, the AI hardware arms race has seen chipmakers jockeying for position, with Intel recently targeting Nvidia and AMD with a new AI chip aimed squarely at the data centers powering both the AI and crypto-mining booms.
For crypto investors, the read-through is about momentum more than mechanics since a faltering AI trade among the megacaps can sap the speculative energy that has buoyed AI tokens and the compute-focused projects riding the same wave. Bitcoin miners that have pivoted to leasing capacity to AI tenants are likewise exposed to any cooling in AI demand or valuations.
Apple’s near-term future now hinges on execution as the company will need to ship its new Siri features on schedule as well as prove that its Google-powered system works as advertised, particularly on the privacy front (a key differentiator that Apple has staked its brand on for well over a decade).
