U.S. tech stocks shaken,
but market not stirred
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[June 16, 2017]
By Lewis Krauskopf, Rodrigo Campos and Megan Davies
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The five largest U.S. technology companies may have
lost enough market capitalization over the past week to buy plane maker
Boeing, but the benchmark S&P 500 stock index <.SPX> has managed to
remain within a stone's throw of its record high.
Apple <AAPL.O., Alphabet, Microsoft , Amazon <AMZN.O> and Facebook, the
five largest U.S. technology stocks, have seen their combined market
capitalization fall by about $120 billion since last Thursday.
By Thursday the S&P 500 technology index <.SPLRCT> had seen its largest
five-day drop in a year.
The slide was again led by sector heavyweights Apple and Alphabet, as
investors moved away from what had been the year's best-performing
sector and rotated portfolios into stocks that pay higher dividends amid
some signs that U.S. economic weakness.
“I think it’s a perfectly normal backing off. Tech has done really well.
All of sudden everyone wakes up and says, ‘Holy cow, maybe we’re getting
ahead of ourselves,’ and backs off a little bit," said Brad McMillan,
Chief Investment Officer for Commonwealth Financial in Waltham,
Massachusetts.
Among technology stocks hit, shares of Google's parent Alphabet fell 0.8
percent Thursday after broker Canaccord Genuity downgraded its rating of
the stock to "hold" from "buy."
The broker downgrade triggered a broader technology sector selloff
according to Kim Forrest, senior equity research analyst at Fort Pitt
Capital Group in Pittsburgh.
Apple shares slid 0.6 percent on Thursday, extending their five-day
decline to 6.9 percent. Barclays analyst Mark Moskowitz wrote that Apple
is near the peak valuation levels in its iPhone 6 cycle which "could
mean a bumpy ride lower" if the prospects for sales of its next phone
disappoint.
Shares of social media company Snap Inc <SNAP.N> closed at their initial
public offering price of $17 for the first time.
Some investors were selling technology shares to rotate into other
sectors, such as beaten-down energy stocks, said Russ Koesterich,
co-portfolio manager of BlackRock’s Global Allocation Fund. “It’s more
the winners into the losers, rather than a broader move toward safety,”
he said.
The recent decline notwithstanding, the technology sector remains the
best performing so far this year, up 17.4 percent versus the overall S&P
500 index gain of 8.6 percent.
ROTATION TO VALUE AMID WEAK U.S. ECONOMIC DATA
Companies including Apple and Google parent Alphabet have seen their
stock prices soar in 2017, and their heavy weightings in benchmark stock
indexes prompted concerns that overall market gains are too concentrated
in a handful of large technology firms.
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A man holds his smartphone which displays the Google home page, in
this picture illustration taken in Bordeaux, Southwestern France,
August 22, 2016. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
"We had sensed over the last 4-5 weeks that clients were becoming
uncomfortable with the clustering of returns to the S&P 500", said
Julian Emanuel, executive director of U.S. equity and derivatives
strategy at UBS Securities. "It felt to us that you had the elixir for a
correction in the (technology) sector."
Concern over the earlier gains in technology stocks this year has been
compounded by some recent weak U.S. economic data.
Last month, the U.S. economy added 138,000 jobs, well below the expected
gain of 185,000. On Wednesday, the Commerce Department said Wednesday
that retail sales fell 0.3 percent in May, marking the largest one-month
decline since January of last year. Also, the Labor Department said its
Consumer Price Index dipped 0.1 percent last month, the second drop in
inflation in three months. In the 12 months through May, the CPI rose
1.9 percent, the smallest increase since last November.
U.S. Treasury yields tumbled to their lowest since early November on
Wednesday on the weak data.
"Tech is one of the losing sectors when the interest rate trade is
dominating because rates are falling," said Brian Nick, chief investment
strategist at TIAA Investments, an affiliate of Nuveen, because
investors need to look for higher yield in dividend paying stocks.
RESILIENCE IN S&P 500 BENCHMARK
Despite the 3.7 percent drop for technology stocks <.SPLRCT> over the
past five sessions, the S&P 500 <.SPX> index has barely budged, slipping
just 0.05 percent over the same period.
The resilience in the S&P 500 benchmark has resulted from investors
rotating their portfolios into other sectors such as financials and the
more defensive sectors like real estate <.SPLRCR>.
"It definitely feels like a rotation that's gone on for a few days with
tech being weakened," said Edward Perkin, chief equity investment
officer at Eaton Vance. "What's done well in the last few days is the
more bond-like plays."
(Additional reporting by Sinead Carew in New York and Noel Randewich in
San Francisco; editing by Clive McKeef)
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