PI Global Investments
Finance

Nvidia rebound fuels Nasdaq rally as Dow falls 300 points


This year’s stock market rally has been led by just a few large tech names — but that might not be such a bad thing.

Yahoo Finance’s Josh Schafer has the scoop:

“We see a small group of tech winners leading stock gains as a feature of the artificial intelligence (AI) theme — not a flaw,” Jean Boivin, head of BlackRock Investment Institute, wrote in a research note on Monday. “We stay overweight U.S. stocks.”

AI darling Nvidia (NVDA) has accounted for nearly one-third of the S&P 500’s gains this year, and outperformance in quarterly results from large-cap tech continues to be a reason why earnings for the S&P 500 are growing year over year.

As of Monday’s close, Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Broadcom (AVGO) had also contributed more than a quarter of the major index’s gains.

One potential concern is that the market could be at risk if a few large tech companies that have driven a lion’s share of the gains stop surprising to the upside.

However, research from Morgan Stanley’s chief investment officer, Mike Wilson, shows this might not be an issue.

Wilson found roughly 20% of the top 500 stocks are outperforming the broader index over a rolling one-month period. This is the lowest percentage of companies outperforming in Wilson’s dataset dating back to 1965.

Wilson’s work noted that after similar narrow breadth readings where less than 35% of companies are outperforming the index on a one-month basis, the S&P 500 rose about 4% on average over the next six months.

“Narrow breadth can persist but it’s not necessarily a headwind to forward returns in and of itself,” Wilson said. “We believe broadening is likely to be limited to high quality/large cap pockets for now.”

Wilson argued that when considering the impact of high interest rates on corporations, this makes sense. Investors have flooded large-market-cap stocks that have held up well in the higher rate environment and are seeing earnings grow more than their smaller peers.

And a slew of recent upgrades to year-end S&P 500 targets reflect similar sentiment. Three Wall Street firms cited tech outperformance as part of the reason the index is doing better than they initially thought this year.



Source link

Related posts

I could have stopped Everton’s financial meltdown

D.William

Regulating ESG rating firms as the gatekeepers for sustainable finance | Capital Markets Law Journal

D.William

Shaping the ideal development finance deal should not be a guessing game – trusting in transparency and collaboration

D.William

Leave a Comment

* By using this form you agree with the storage and handling of your data by this website.