California: The rally in tech megacaps gained further traction, with the Nasdaq 100 notching its best ever first-half of a year and Apple hitting the $3 trillion milestone.
Traders decided to look at the glass half full as data showed inflation is moderating, even if that comes at the expense of growth. Stocks extended this year’s surge, with tech consolidating its leadership amid the ascent of artificial intelligence. Big banks saw their first monthly gain since January after passing the Federal Reserve’s stress test. In late hours, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co., Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. announced higher dividends.
Nearly $5 trillion has been added to the value of companies in the Nasdaq 100 since the start of the year, with the tech-heavy gauge defying bubble warnings and jumping almost 40 per cent. The advance in the most-influential group in the S&P 500 helped push the index up 16 per cent in 2023. Gains have been even more pronounced when narrowed down to the megacap space - which has soared 74 per cent.
“I still do like big tech,” Larry Adam, chief investment officer at Raymond James, told Bloomberg Television. “I do believe in technology continuing to reinvent itself “- obviously with the latest addition being AI. That’ll continue to drive earnings.”
The “Big Seven” - including Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon.com, Meta Platforms, Nvidia and Tesla - boosted profits by 14 per cent a year during the decade through 2022. While their combined earnings slumped more than 20 per cent last year, they’re expected to recover swiftly.
The Nasdaq 100 rose over 1.5 per cent Friday, while the S&P 500 hit the highest since April 2022. The US equity benchmark posted its best first half since 2019. Nvidia, which has almost tripled this year, was up about 3.5 per cent.
If history is any guide, the Nasdaq 100’s strength this year augurs well for the rest of 2023.
Years that start with rallies in the index of at least 10 per cent average returns of about 14 per cent over the second half of the year, though that shrinks to an 8.3 per cent gain when the first-half gain tops 20 per cent, according to an analysis of data compiled by Bloomberg.
The market’s fascination with the power of generative AI has trumped every major issue that could potentially drag down sentiment this year: recession fears, elevated levels of inflation, prospects for more Fed hikes, geopolitical risks, the debt-ceiling debate and the collapse of a few regional banks.
While the rally in AI has drawn comparisons with the dot-com bubble of 2000, when the market was driven by a similarly narrow breadth of tech stocks before a crash, BlackRock’s Tony DeSpirito said earnings growth is coming.
“Demand is really real,” said DeSpirito, the firm’s chief investment officer of US fundamental equities. “That contrasts what’s going on in AI versus the metaverse a year ago, or virtual reality. The orders are there.”
Still, after such a strong advance, there’s growing concern about valuations, and that has recently spurred a surge in bearish bets against the largest tech companies. Short interest as a percentage of shares available to trade is near 12-month highs for Microsoft, Tesla and Amazon, according to data compiled by S3 Partners.
‘Be selective’
“We don’t believe the AI trend is a bubble, but advise investors to be selective on AI-related stocks after the strong year-to-date rally,” said Sundeep Gantori, equity strategist at UBS Global Wealth Management. “From a positioning point of view, we recently closed our self-help theme as we see better risk-reward in mid-cycle industries (software, internet) and tech laggards.”
“Until evidence of more rampant overbought conditions joins forces with more bullish sentiment and some evidence of defensive strength and/or waning technical breadth, it’s arguably wrong to consider abandoning this rally based on overbought conditions alone when technical trends remain very much intact,” Newton noted.
Also helping tech on Friday was the fact that action in the bond market was subdued. Treasury 10-year yields fell to around 3.8 per cent. The dollar dropped, extending this year’s losses.
Key measures of US inflation cooled in May and consumer spending stagnated, suggesting the economy’s main engine is starting to lose some momentum. The personal consumption expenditures price index, one of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauges, rose 0.1 per cent. From a year ago, the measure stepped down to 3.8 per cent, the smallest annual advance in more than two years.
“The May PCE report released today is relatively benign from a Fed perspective and leans in the direction of the Fed ultimately delivering only one more rather than two more rate increases,” said Krishna Guha, vice chairman of Evercore ISI. “This should curb a bit the recent back-up in yields and favor big tech.”
Elsewhere, Brent oil posted its longest run of quarterly losses in data going back more than three decades amid robust supplies and persistent concerns over demand.
The global benchmark settled below $75 a barrel on Friday, marking its fourth straight quarterly loss, while West Texas Intermediate posted its first back-to-back quarterly declines since 2019.