Tech titans dominate U.S. stock market after surge
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[April 21, 2020] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors are once
again crowding into a narrow range of technology and internet stocks,
heightening concerns that the market's dramatic bounce from last month's
lows is becoming increasingly vulnerable to sharp reversals as the
coronavirus outbreak continues to batter the economy.
Just five stocks - Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Google parent Alphabet and
Facebook - account for more than 20% of the market cap of the entire S&P
500 index, according to BofA Global Research. That's a greater
concentration in the top stocks than was seen during the dotcom bubble
of 2000, analysts at the bank wrote.
The information technology sector carried a 25.4% weighting in the S&P
500 as of Friday, far more than the other 10 major sectors and slightly
more than its weighting on Feb. 19, when the benchmark index hit its
all-time high.
Strong balance sheets and business models that appear likely to weather
the fallout from the outbreak have made these companies appealing
destinations during the severe volatility of the past several months.
But a top-heavy market is also a worrisome sign to some investors -
especially as concerns grow that the S&P's 26% rally from its March lows
have put it far ahead of economic fundamentals at a time when the United
States continues to shed jobs at a record pace and corporate earnings
are deteriorating.
The index's narrow leadership may also be an indication that investors
are skeptical that other areas of the market will fare well in coming
months. At the same time, a turn lower in stocks could cause investors
to bail out of winning shares to lock in their gains, leading to even
steeper declines.
"If the market decides it is going to roll back over again and head back
down to retest those lows, then people are going to take profits where
the profits are greatest," said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment
strategist at Charles Schwab.
Amazon, Microsoft and Netflix have been the greatest contributors to the
S&P 500's total shareholder return so far this year, as of Friday,
according to Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones
Indices.
Netflix shares have climbed 35% so far in 2020, Amazon has risen nearly
30%, while Microsoft is up 11%.
Graphic - Tech, Internet stocks take charge:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/
editorcharts/qmyvmllbpra/eikon.png
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The logos of mobile apps, Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple and
Netflix, are displayed on a screen in this illustration picture
taken December 3, 2019. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
Meanwhile, an analysis by research firm Bernstein showed technology and internet
names among the market's most widely owned stocks. The market's five most
crowded stocks are Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Visa and UnitedHealth, according
to Bernstein's analysis, which uses factors such as institutional ownership and
price momentum.
"You have a market that was narrow back in February and too concentrated in
technology. Now it's even more so," said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at
Miller Tabak.
"There's a reason why this happens when the market is vulnerable, because people
don't see a lot of value in the overall market, so they go into the small number
of names they do see a lot of value in," Maley said.
Investors are watching for signs of equity weakness as other markets, such as
oil which saw prices turn negative on Monday, are showing stress. Short bets
against the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust rose last week to their highest level in data
dating back to January 2016, according to financial analytics firm S3 Partners.
The appeal of tech and other internet companies makes sense to some investors,
especially with an uncertain market and economic outlook.
"For a lot of folks, any growth is still going to be in the tech space, so it
continues to argue for putting money into those stocks because growth is going
to be at a premium," said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon
Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana.
And while tech has outperformed the overall market, stocks in some other areas
also have held up well, especially in healthcare and consumer staples, two
traditionally defensive sectors.
"Technology has never been considered a 'defensive' sector, but maybe it should
be considering how well it has performed during a global pandemic," Bespoke
Investment Group said in a report.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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