The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Soaring U.S. tech stocks leave some investors doubtful rebound will last

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NEW YORK— Hopes that inflation is subsiding are fueling a surge in battered technology and megacap stocks, though some investors believe still-high valuations and doubts over the companies’ earnings outlooks may make a sustained reversal elusive.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index rose 8.1 per cent last week to notch its biggest weekly gain since March, one of several eye-popping market moves that also saw Treasuries soar and the U.S. dollar tumble after Thursday’s softer-thanexpect­ed inflation data spurred hopes the Federal Reserve could temper its rate hikes.

Despite those recent gains, some investors are hesitant to jump on the rebound in shares of companies such as Amazon.com Inc, Microsoft Corp and Google-parent Alphabet Inc, which have stumbled badly this year after leading markets higher for more than a decade.

Few believe the Fed will be swayed by a single inflation print, and past rebounds fueled by Fedrelated optimism have crumbled this year after discouragi­ng economic data or pushback from policymake­rs.

At the same time, tech sector valuations remain well above the overall market, while analysts are dimming their profit outlooks for the group.

While lower interest rates could drive nearterm demand for the stocks, “we think that there is still going to be some valuation and earnings concern,” said James Ragan, director of wealth management research at D.A. Davidson. “We are not really looking for those sectors to retake the leadership of the market.”

In the coming week investors will be watching a spate of economic data, including retail sales numbers on Wednesday, for more clues on whether the Fed’s monetary policy tightening is cooling the economy.

Tech and growth stocks have been hit hard this year, with the Russell 1000 growth index still down 25 per cent for 2022, compared to a 16per cent decline for the S&P 500 and a 7 per cent fall for the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Tech sector funds have seen $14.2 billion in outflows so far this year, putting them on track for their first year of outflows since 2016, according to Refinitiv Lipper data.

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