Tech shares post biggest decline since June

Tech shares post biggest decline since June
The Nasdaq 100 fell as much as 5.4% as Apple, Tesla and Amazon all sank
SEP 03, 2020
By  Bloomberg

The megacap tech shares that drove stocks to record after record plunged Thursday as bears reclaimed the upper hand on U.S. equity markets, at least for a day.

The Nasdaq 100 sank as much as 5.4% and posted its biggest rout since June. Apple Inc., Tesla Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., among the biggest contributors to the historic five-month rally, lost at least 5.1%. The index had gained in 11 of 13 sessions to notch records almost daily, defying bears who warned that valuations had become too stretched.

At 12:10 p.m., the Nasdaq was down 4.09%, while the S&P 500 index was off 2.6% and the Dow was down 1.8%.

Highlighting the narrowness of the unwind, an equal-weight version of the S&P 500 that gives Coty Inc. just as much clout as Microsoft Corp. lost only a third as much as the market cap-weighted version, marking the biggest performance gap since July.

Signs of danger mounted throughout the past week, as bears all but vanished from the market and measures of bullish sentiment reached levels last seen in the dot-com craze. Relative strength indicators spiked into overbought territory and the Nasdaq 100 traded 30% above its 200-day moving average. So insatiable had the appetite for tech shares become that Apple and Tesla surged Monday just by lowering their share prices via stocks splits.

“The tech stocks were way too overbought,” said Alec Young, chief investment officer at Tactical Alpha. “Going forward, the market will be led by other things. Tech will participate, but I don’t think it will be leadership, you can’t justify further valuations.”

Investors have flocked to megacap technology shares for their large cash balances and COVID-beneficiary qualities this year, so much so that the Nasdaq 100 has added $1.6 billion to its market cap each hour since March, according to Bank of America Corp.

As some of the year’s best performers tumbled, more economically sensitive industries including banks and energy gained. Stocks that stand to benefit most from an economic reopening, including airlines and cruises, surged too. Carnival Corp. and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings each jumped more than 8%.

Yet even as value shares jumped, so too did bonds. Ten-year Treasury yields slipped below 65 basis points as investors snapped up safe haven assets.

After flirting with $12,000 earlier in the week, Bitcoin also retreated Thursday, falling as much as 6% to trade around $10,890. That’s its lowest level since July. The world’s largest digital currency has largely been trading in tandem with riskier assets, falling when stocks fall and vice versa.

Latest News

Edward Jones announces C-suite shakeup with eye toward next chapter
Edward Jones announces C-suite shakeup with eye toward next chapter

The leadership changes coming in June, which also include wealth management and digital unit heads, come as the firm pushes to offer more comprehensive services.

Harvard muni bonds a buy amid battle with Trump White House, Barclays says
Harvard muni bonds a buy amid battle with Trump White House, Barclays says

Strategist sees relatively little risk of the university losing its tax-exempt status, which could pose opportunity for investors with a "longer time horizon."

The great wealth transfer demands a wealth management revolution
The great wealth transfer demands a wealth management revolution

As the next generation of investors take their turn, advisors have to strike a fine balance between embracing new technology and building human connections.

Independent Financial Group taps industry veteran Keefe as new president, COO
Independent Financial Group taps industry veteran Keefe as new president, COO

IFG works with 550 producing advisors and generates about $325 million in annual revenue, said Dave Fischer, the company's co-founder and chief marketing officer.

Net Positive Consortium gains momentum with new members, first strategic partner
Net Positive Consortium gains momentum with new members, first strategic partner

Five new RIAs are joining the industry coalition promoting firm-level impact across workforce, client, community and environmental goals.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.