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SoFi stock ends week on a sharp drop — what traders are watching next
1 March 2026
1 min read

SoFi stock ends week on a sharp drop — what traders are watching next

New York, March 1, 2026, 14:37 EST — Market finished the session

  • SoFi saw its shares tumble 7.0% Friday, with trading volume running unusually high.
  • Financials and tech shares got caught up in a wider risk-off mood, and the move followed that pattern.
  • Attention now swings to U.S. jobs numbers due March 6, with the Fed’s March 17-18 meeting also looming.

SoFi Technologies, Inc. dropped 7.0% on Friday, ending the session at $17.76. The stock hit a low of $17.31 during the day as sellers stepped in late week. Trading volume swelled to around 115.3 million shares—well above Thursday’s 69.9 million.

The drop stings going into Monday. SoFi acts like a high-beta lender—it takes the brunt when risk appetite fades or interest rate outlooks sour. After Friday’s slide, momentum is against the stock heading into the new week.

Friday brought a quick change in tone on Wall Street. Financials and tech stocks slid after a stronger inflation print, fresh anxiety over AI-related disruptions, renewed tariff questions, and heightened geopolitical strains, according to Reuters. “We were reminded there are still some cracks out there,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, in the story. Reuters

No clear SoFi headline cropped up during the session to justify the drop. Instead, traders talked about what was on the screens: big volume, jittery sentiment, and a market-wide selloff that hit rate-sensitive stocks across the board.

Digital lenders are feeling the heat. Margins get pinched as funding costs rise, and stricter credit slows down loan growth. SoFi’s stock, for its part, tends to move on the back of macro numbers and what the Fed might do—even when the company’s own outlook hasn’t shifted.

This week, two key dates could shake up forecasts. First up: the U.S. employment report for February hits at 8:30 a.m. ET on March 6—a release known for jolting Treasury yields and shifting bets on rate cuts.

Next up: the Federal Reserve’s policy gathering on March 17-18. Investors will be scanning the statement for tweaks to how officials talk about inflation and interest rates.

SoFi bulls face a real risk: if Friday’s selloff deepens thanks to another inflation surprise or continued focus on strict lending standards, investors could keep cutting back on growth-focused financials.

What’s next? Friday’s jobs numbers, followed by the Fed’s meeting in two weeks, are the obvious macro triggers on the horizon.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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