Analysis: High-flying U.S. tech stocks get post-election lift, near new
highs
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[November 07, 2020] By
David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A weaker-than-expected
election performance by Democrats and fears of new coronavirus
restrictions have prompted investors to double down on high-flying
technology stocks, which have come roaring back in recent days to put
the Nasdaq within striking distance of a record.
Since Election Day, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite is up 6.6%, easily
outpacing the 4.2% gain in the broad S&P 500 over the same time. This
was partly driven by investors and traders unwinding trades placed on
pre-election assumptions of a Democratic sweep which they thought would
usher in higher taxes and more regulation.
Polls had forecast Democrats would solidly win the presidency on
Tuesday, extend their control in the House of Representatives and
potentially win control of the Senate. While Democratic candidate Joe
Biden looks likely to win the presidency, the margin of victory appears
to be razor thin; Democrats lost seats in the House and the Senate is
evenly divided ahead of two runoff elections in Georgia on Jan. 5.
The result leaves Democrats in a weak position to push through a
progressive agenda of increasing corporate and capital gains tax rates,
said Steve Chiavarone, portfolio manager at Federated Hermes.
Investors had been expected to sell high-flying tech stocks and lock in
current capital gains tax levels ahead of a strong Democratic showing in
the election.
But there will still likely be some tax-motivated selling of technology
stocks at the end of the calendar year ahead of the Jan. 5 Senate runoff
election, Chiavarone warned.
“Even though a Georgia Senate runoff is a risk in the eyes of the
Street, both of those seats going blue is a highly unlikely scenario,"
said Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, who sees a risk of
tax-motivated selling in late December but expects tech stocks to rise
another 15% through the end of the year.
Beyond the short-term impacts that have swung tech this week, investors
said the long term reasons to own tech remain.
"Tech has been getting cheap, at least relative to where it's been, and
that sets it up nicely if we have to have a move back to a stricter stay
at home mandate," said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The
Leuthold Group.
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A view of the exterior of the Nasdaq market site in the Manhattan
borough of New York City, U.S., October 24, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton/File Photo/File Photo
Apple, for instance, now trades at a price to earnings ratio of 35.1, compared
with its 52-week high of 40.9, while Amazon.com Inc trades at a P/E of 94.9,
compared with its 52-week high of 152. Microsoft trades at a trailing P/E of 36,
down from its 52-week high of 40.2, while Facebook trades at a P/E of 34.9, down
from its 52-week high of 38.8.
CORONAVIRUS CONCERNS
Spiking coronavirus cases may also prompt investor demand on the view that
record high cases in the United States will prompt state and local authorities
to impose new economic restrictions. [FWN2HQ12G]
"You are seeing (COVID-19) flare-ups and real issues throughout the world, and
it's the same types of companies - the Apples, the Netflix's and PayPals - that
have fared so well during the pandemic that investors believe will continue to
do well if we have another form of an aggressive lockdown," said David Marcus,
chief investment officer at Evermore Global Advisors.
Overall, investors will likely remain bullish on technology stocks until there
are greater signs that the broad economy has regained its footing and
coronavirus treatments and vaccines are widely available, said Brian Jacobsen,
senior investment strategist for the multi-asset solutions team at Wells Fargo
Asset Management.
Tech stocks "are the ones that have been able to prove that they have very
resilient business models to this new economy that we're going through," he
said.
Still, some investors cautioned about the risks of betting too much on tech.
"The idea that those big tech companies are the only game in town defies the way
the economy functions," said Bill Smead, chief investment officer at Smead
Capital Management.
(Reporting by David Randall; additional reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft in
London; editing by Megan Davies)
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