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Nasdaq 100 loses US$1 trillion in value — again

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
Nasdaq 100 loses US$1 trillion in value — again
"It's too early to turn positive on US tech stocks." - Edmund Shing of BNP Paribas Wealth / Bloomberg
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The Nasdaq 100 Index lost more than US$1 trillion in market value in the past four sessions. Its roller-coaster ride may have just begun.

The tech-heavy benchmark now has seen more than $1 trillion evaporate from peak to trough every month this year, as tighter monetary policy and surging bond yields ignite concern among investors that the economy is headed for a recession.

“It’s too early to turn positive on US tech stocks,” said Edmund Shing, BNP Paribas Wealth’s chief investment officer. “There’s more downside likely very short term” as high inflation leads to slower discretionary consumption, he said.

The magnitude of the losses reflect the massive size of technology companies, and how far they have to fall: The Nasdaq 100 has returned an average of 38% annually over the past three years versus 26% for the broader S&P 500 Index. Higher interest rates reduce the present value of future earnings, weighing especially on shares of fast-growing companies.

In January, a whopping uS$3 trillion was wiped out by the time the rout bottomed out, while February and March were relatively better, seeing selloffs of US$1.7 trillion and US$1.5 trillion, respectively. Companies in the index have a combined market value of US$16.9 trillion, led by Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp and Amazon.com Inc.

See also: 2023 demonstrated the importance of US equity exposure for Asia's investors

The Nasdaq 100 fell as much as 1.6% on Monday as yield on 10-year US Treasuries continued to climb.

Tech stocks staged a three-week rebound along with the broader market beginning in mid-March. But the war in Ukraine, rising inflation, hawkish Federal Reserve comments and lockdowns across China triggered another decline last week.

The Fed raised its key rate by a quarter point last month and signalled it expects to lift it to 1.9% by the end of 2022 as the central bank seeks to bring inflation under control. Officials have said they’re open to moving faster if needed, including by hiking a half-point at their May 3-4 meeting.

See also: This isn't your father's S&P 500. Don't worry about valuations

Some parts of the technology industry also have been hit by the fresh lockdowns in China, which have forced the shutdown of factories and foundries, further disrupting already-strained supply chains.

As a result, chipmakers have been the biggest drag to the index, with Nvidia Corp, Marvell Technology Inc and Qualcomm Inc among the worst-performing stocks in the index in the latest selloff. The Philadelphia semiconductor index sank 7.3% in its biggest weekly drop since January.

For now, industry growth is robust, with global revenue increasing 32% in February from a year earlier, the 11th consecutive month of growth above 20%, according to Harsh Kumar, an analyst at Piper Sandler Cos.

And the broader tech sector may find a bottom soon as long as earnings growth trends remain solid, said BNP Paribas Wealth’s Shing.

The Nasdaq 100 now is down 14% from its November peak, valuing it at about 24 times projected profits. While that’s still elevated relative to the average of less than 20 over the past decade, it’s down about 20% from the peak in 2020.

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