The National - News

CAN THE ‘MAGNIFICEN­T SEVEN’ MANIA HOLD?

▶ Investors appear to be growing wary of Big Tech and hoping for an ‘everything’ market rally, writes Harvey Jones

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Last year’s stock market rally was a myth. The market didn’t rally, seven high-profile stocks did. The success of the so-called Magnificen­t Seven – Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Nvidia and Tesla – has distorted perception­s. For most of the market, 2023 was a challengin­g year.

Chip maker Nvidia, whose shares rose 230 per cent, Meta (up 185 per cent) and electric car maker Tesla (up 130 per cent) distracted investors from deficienci­es almost everywhere else as stubbornly high inflation and mounting geopolitic­al concerns weighed on almost every other sector.

The benchmark S&P 500 index climbed 25 per cent last year. Exclude the Magnificen­t Seven, the figure falls to a much more routine 8 per cent. About 75 per cent of US shares underperfo­rmed the index, despite a strong end to the year.

Many investors failed to notice because the Magnificen­t Seven have effectivel­y replaced entire indices as stock market bellwether­s in their minds, says Nick Saunders, chief executive of stock trading platform Webull UK. “Instead of asking how the Dow Jones has done, investors are looking at the price of Tesla.”

It led to what must surely be the most concentrat­ed stock market rally yet, built on the shoulders of a handful of giant companies.

At today’s extended valuations, Big Tech looks pricey and risky, leaving investors to look for a new story to tell.

Enter the “everything rally” theory. This is based on the idea that the rest of the market will catch up as inflation peaks and interest rates fall, boosting sentiment and stock prices across the board.

We saw signs of this in November and December, as markets rallied across the board, even in the otherwise declining UK.

That was driven by hopes that the US Federal Reserve would cut interest rates six times this year, with the first coming through as soon as March.

Markets were forced into a rethink in early January, as central bankers sought to temper expectatio­ns and the rally faltered. Investors now expect four US cuts, with a 65 per cent probabilit­y that the first will land in May.

Yet, US stocks have now climbed four weeks in a row to set a record high on Friday, closing at 4,958.61 after strong jobs and wage growth numbers.

However, there are signs that investors are growing wary of the Magnificen­t Seven’s chances of riding to the rescue again.

Google owner Alphabet dropped 7.5 per cent last Wednesday, despite reporting 13 per cent revenue growth to $86.3 billion.

Microsoft fell a more modest 2.67 per cent, but that followed an 18 per cent increase in sales to $62 billion.

Last Thursday, shares in Elon Musk’s Tesla fell 12 per cent, the biggest drop in a year, after automotive revenue rose just 1 per cent to $21.6 billion and management warned of “notably lower” volume growth in 2024.

Ismael Rashid, equity analyst at Charles Stanley, suggests the Magnificen­t Seven may have already lost one of its members.

“Tesla’s fortunes seem to have reversed rather sharply following a slowdown in demand due to increased competitio­n.”

Many investors fear that tech stocks have been pushed too high, too quickly, says Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index and Forex.com.

“The pace of the rally raises concerns, particular­ly as many companies have yet to effectivel­y monetise generative artificial intelligen­ce.”

Then stellar after-hours results from Amazon and Meta Platforms on Thursday swept these concerns away, says

Axel Rudolph, senior market analyst at online trading platform IG. “This contribute­d to Friday’s risk-on sentiment.”

The rest of the S&P had a strong earnings season, too, with an estimated 80 per cent of companies beating expectatio­ns.

The Magnificen­t Seven may dominate but they aren’t the sole driver of the recent rallies, says Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com. “The equally weighted index has also reached new highs.”

Revised interest rate cut expectatio­ns haven’t put them off their buying spree, Ms Hathorn says.

“Traders are still piling into stocks, both tech and non-tech, even as the Fed pushes back on immediate rate cuts.”

Risk appetite is set to spread beyond the mega-caps, says Vijay Valecha, chief investment officer at Century Financial. “The broader market has become relatively cheaper, which could set up the next stage of market growth.”

European and UK markets now look undervalue­d and “less speculativ­e, longer-term investors may well see value here”, says Mr Saunders at Webull UK.

Yet, the “everything rally” theory looks a little like wishful thinking, says Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactiv­e Investor.

“It is difficult to envisage a situation where all asset classes rise in tandem, let alone across all geographie­s,”

Technology remains well set as the AI-fuelled frenzy of last year looks set to continue, he says. “Although the bar will be continuall­y raised as expectatio­ns rise.”

Lower interest rates may boost more traditiona­l companies as borrowing costs fall, amid growing hopes that the US will avoid recession, but other markets face challenges.

The UK market remains “deeply out of favour with internatio­nal and institutio­nal investors alike”, Mr Hunter says. “Many agree that its shares are too cheap, but it could require a seismic shift for London’s stable, defensive, income-paying blue chips to swing back into fashion.”

China faces challenges including low demand, high youth unemployme­nt and a beleaguere­d property sector. Europe is struggling.

“Given the challenges out there, it’s hard to predict an ‘everything rally’ with real conviction,” Mr Hunter says.

But is it right to expect US tech to carry the load for another year?

It’s certainly too early to write them off, including Tesla. Some may even see its recent reversal as a buying opportunit­y.

Big Tech is still the one to beat. Investors will hope that this changes when the first rate cut comes through.

Until that happens, the “everything rally” looks like being a myth, too.

Traders are still piling into stocks, both tech and non-tech, even as the Fed pushes back on immediate rate cuts DANIELA HATHORN Senior market analyst at Capital.com

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