New communication sector's shine could soon wear off
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[October 13, 2018]
By April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The mash-up of old and
new media may not be a winning combination for the new S&P communication
services sector index <.SPLRCL> as its highest fliers face regulatory
threats and challenges to user growth.
The reconstituted sector, which debuted at the end of September,
includes telecom, internet, media and entertainment companies such as
AT&T Inc <T.N>, Walt Disney Co <DIS.N> and Twitter Inc <TWTR.N>.
Three of the five momentum stocks collectively known as FAANGs -
Facebook Inc <FB.O>, Netflix Inc <NFLX.O> and Google parent company
Alphabet Inc <GOOGL.O> - make up roughly half of the new sector by
market capitalization.
Facebook and Alphabet moved to communication services from the
technology sector <.SPLRCT>. Netflix was previously in the consumer
discretionary sector <.SPLRCD>. The other FAANG stocks, Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>
and Apple Inc <AAPL.O>, remain in the consumer discretionary and
technology sectors, respectively.
The addition of several FAANG stocks, among the fastest-rising shares on
the S&P 500 <.SPX>, has brought more attention to the once-sleepy
sector, formerly known as telecom. Indeed, so far communication services
has closely tracked the technology sector. Both have slid significantly
during sell-offs in October, including a 5.3-percent drop for the S&P
500 over Wednesday and Thursday.
The two indexes recovered somewhat in trading on Friday. The
communication sector was last down 5.3 percent month-to-date, ahead of
tech's 6.0 percent slide.
On one hand, the communication sector's old-media names have cushioned
it somewhat in comparison to tech's steeper plunge, but those less
growth-oriented companies also limit the sector's upside potential.
Also, several of the sector's growth companies - Facebook, Alphabet and
Twitter - face regulatory risks that tech companies do not. Recent
disclosures of privacy breaches have increased concern among some
investors that the U.S. government could soon target internet companies
with new regulations.
"The regulatory pendulum tends to swing from 'not enough' to 'too much,'
and it will take time to balance," said Scott Wren, senior global equity
strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute in St. Louis. "In the
meantime, we have to think about overregulation."
As a result, market strategists have been less than enthused. On Monday,
Wells Fargo Investment Institute gave the sector an "unfavorable"
rating. Bank of America Merrill Lynch and RBC Capital Markets rate the
sector "underweight."
On Monday, Google announced that private data from 500,000 users of its
Google+ social network, whose consumer version is being shut down, may
have been exposed to external developers. On Sept. 28, Facebook said
that hackers had stolen digital login codes allowing them to take over
user accounts. Some 29 million accounts were affected, the company said
in a update on Friday. [nL4N1WS51H]
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The floor of the NYSE stands ready for the Twitter Inc. IPO in 2013.
In 2018, the stock is now part of the new S&P communication services
sector REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo/File Photo
Executives from Facebook and Twitter had testified before Congress in September
on their companies' data security practices.
Another communications high-flier, Netflix, faces a separate challenge.
Netflix's shares dropped 5.2 percent on July 17 after the company's rate of
international subscriber growth in the second quarter underwhelmed investors.
Another disappointing number for international growth could alarm investors,
said Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust Company in
Atlanta.
"That would be a concern because Netflix is so dependent on the international
side in terms of its growth," Morgan said. "The domestic side has become pretty
mature."
Netflix is scheduled to report its third-quarter results on Tuesday.
Given the risks to the communication sector's internet stocks, the sector is
less attractive than technology or consumer discretionary for investors seeking
growth, said Wren. At the same time, the sector's relatively high
price-to-earnings ratio and low yield make it unsuitable for value-oriented
investors.
Also, two communication stocks, Netflix and Alphabet, are among the most
trade-sensitive within the 100 largest U.S. stocks by market cap, according to
an Oct. 4 note from Morgan Stanley.
Both have been more reactive to Chinese market assets relative to other
large-cap stocks since March, when U.S. President Donald Trump first announced
tariffs on Chinese goods, said Brian Hayes, quantitative analyst at Morgan
Stanley, in an email to Reuters.
To be sure, the FAANG stocks remain among the most popular buys on Wall Street.
The NYSE FANG+TM <.NYFANG> index, which holds those stocks along with several
other growth stocks, including Twitter, is up 15.1 percent year to date, well
above the S&P 500's 3.6-percent advance.
But with that popularity also comes outsized potential for downside in the
sector they dominate.
"The level of valuation tends to be quite high," said Tim Ghriskey, chief
investment strategist at Inverness Counsel in New York. "That's the primary
issue here and the primary risk."
(Reporting by April Joyner; Editing by Alden Bentley and Nick Zieminski)
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