New Straits Times

TECH STOCK RALLY LIKELY TO CONTINUE

S&P500 has risen roughly 20pc this year, led by Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft

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TECHNOLOGY shares have led United States stocks to record highs and are expected to continue to rise, but as market value becomes concentrat­ed in the largest companies, some are beginning to look for the next rally leader.

The technology sector of the S&P 500 has risen roughly 20 per cent so far this year, led by Apple, Alphabet, Facebook and Microsoft.

The only other company with comparable gains in market value this year is Amazon, a market darling not in the technology sector despite being a big player in cloud services and data storage.

“These are the dominant players in their specific spaces and the hottest areas in tech,” said Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust Company in Atlanta, highlighti­ng their exposure to the cloud and artificial intelligen­ce.

Active funds have continued to throw their money behind the leaders with a record overweight on the technology sector, according to Bank of America/Merrill Lynch data going back to 2008.

But more than a third of this year’s gains in the S&P 500 have come from these five companies, and the concentrat­ion of the advance has some investors jittery.

“Given how significan­t the (large-cap) leadership has been year to date, I kind of think you need to find another group to produce that leadership,” said Jim Tierney, chief investment officer of concentrat­ed US growth at AllianceBe­rnstein, here.

Echoing Dell, Cisco, Intel and yes, Microsoft itself, the leaders of the Y2K tech boom, these new “five horsemen” have added more than US$612 billion (RM2.6 trillion) in value to the stock market this year. Their gains this year alone could buy the 85 smallest companies of the S&P 500.

Their combined value, near US$3 trillion, is not far from the market value of all the other components of the Nasdaq 100.

This tech rally has come hand in hand with heightened expectatio­ns for profits. Investors are currently paying US$18.50 for every US$1 in earnings expected over the next 12 months in the sector, compared with the more than US$40 they paid during the dot.com bubble and even the US$20-plus seen during the most recent market peak in 2007.

Tech sector earnings are expected to grow 11 per cent in the second quarter after rising near 21 per cent in the first, Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S data showed.

However, with gains of more than 33 per cent for Apple, Facebook and Amazon, near 25 per cent for Alphabet and 15 per cent in Microsoft, compared with a gain of 8.5 per cent for the S&P 500, the room for more upside is declining.

Despite expecting gains upward of 20 per cent for the rest of the year on the so-called FANG stocks — Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Alphabet — and their ilk, analysts at Fundstrat recommende­d in a Friday note balancing portfolios by scooping up the year’s underperfo­rmers: banks, energy and telecoms.

They are not alone in searching for exposure outside technology.

“We’re most ‘overweight’ in technology but I don’t want to stay too long at the party,” said Alan Gayle, director of asset allocation at RidgeWorth Investment­s in Atlanta.

“What I’m watching for is an opportunit­y to lighten up on tech exposure and put it into some of the more cyclical areas,” he said. Reuters

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Facebook and Microsoft have added more than US$612 billion in value to the United States stock market this year.
BLOOMBERG PIC Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Facebook and Microsoft have added more than US$612 billion in value to the United States stock market this year.

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