News
Tech stocks just had their worst two-week stretch since the start of the pandemic
Published
2 years agoon
By
New Yorker
Pedestrians pass by the New York Stock Exchange.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
What started off as a third-quarter rebound has turned into a flop for tech investors.
The Nasdaq Composite tumbled 5.1% this week after losing 5.5% the prior week. That marks the worst two-week stretch for the tech-heavy index since it plunged more than 20% in March 2020 at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in the U.S.
related investing news
With the third quarter set to wrap up next week, the Nasdaq is poised to notch losses for a third straight quarter unless it can erase what’s now a 1.5% decline over the final five trading days of the period.
Investors have been dumping tech stocks since late 2021, betting that rising inflation and higher interest rates would have an outsized impact on the companies that rallied the most during boom times. The Nasdaq now sits narrowly above its two-year low set in June.
Markets were hammered by continued rate raising by the Fed, which on Wednesday boosted benchmark interest rates by another three-quarters of a percentage point and indicated it will keep hiking well above the current level as it tries to bring down inflation from its highest levels since the early 1980s. The central bank took its federal funds rate up to a range of 3%-3.25%, the highest it’s been since early 2008, following the third consecutive 0.75 percentage point move.
Meanwhile, as rising rates have pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to its highest in 11 years, the dollar has been strengthening. That makes U.S. products more expensive in other countries, hurting tech companies that are heavy on exports.
“This is a one-two punch on tech,” Jack Ablin, Cresset Capital’s chief investment officer, told CNBC’s “TechCheck” on Friday. “The strong dollar doesn’t help tech. High 10-year Treasury yields don’t help tech.”
Among the group of mega-cap companies, Amazon had the worst week, dropping close to 8%. Google parent Alphabet and Facebook parent Meta each slid by about 4%. All three companies are in the midst of cost cuts or hiring freezes, as they reckon with some combination of weakening consumer demand, tepid ad spending and inflationary pressure on wages and products.
As CNBC reported on Friday, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai faced heated questions from employees at an all-hands meeting this week. Staffers expressed concern about cost cuts and recent comments from Pichai regarding the need to improve productivity by 20%.
Tech earnings season is about a month away, and growth expectations are muted. Alphabet is expected to report single-digit revenue expansion after growing more than 40% a year earlier, while Meta is looking at a second straight quarter of declining sales. Apple’s growth is expected to come in at just over 6%. Expectations for Amazon and Microsoft are higher, at about 10% and 16%, respectively.
The latest week was particularly rough for some companies in the sharing economy. Airbnb, Uber, Lyft and DoorDash all suffered drops of between 12% and 14%. In the cloud software market, which soared in recent years before plunging in 2022, some of the steepest declines were in shares of GitLab (-16%), Bill.com (-15%), Asana (-14%) and Confluent (-13%).
Sharing economy stocks this week
CNBC
Cloud giant Salesforce held its annual Dreamforce conference this week in San Francisco. During the portion of the conference targeted at financial metrics, the company announced a new long-range profitability goal that showed its determination to operate more efficiently.
Salesforce is aiming for a 25% adjusted operating margin, including future acquisitions, Chief Financial Officer Amy Weaver said. That’s up from the 20% target Salesforce announced a year ago for its 2023 fiscal year. The company is trying to push down sales and marketing as a percentage of revenue, in part through more self-serve efforts and through improving productivity for salespeople.
Salesforce shares fell 3% for the week and are down 42% for the year.
“There’s so many things happening in the market,” co-CEO Marc Benioff told CNBC’s Jim Cramer in an interview at Dreamforce. “Between currencies and the recession or the pandemic. All of these things that you’re kind of navigating many forces.”
WATCH: Jim Cramer’s interview with Marc Benioff at Dreamforce
Source: CNBC
Jets select Alabama defensive back as 2024 NFL Draft’s ‘Mr. Irrelevant’
Arsenal fans fume ‘Raya what have you done’ after blunder in North London derby
Sued by FTC, bill payment company Doxo disputes ‘unjust’ allegations of deceptive billing
‘Nature Positive’ Report Marks New Collaborative Era in Travel & Tourism
Friday court date could determine fate of Americans arrested for bringing ammo to Turks and Caicos
This Easy Addition to Your Egg Muffins Will Double Your Protein at Breakfast
17 Comforting Recipes to Bring to a Friend Who Is Grieving
The Truth About Popular Sleep Supplements, From Magnesium to Melatonin
Olivia Munn’s Cancer Treatment Led to ‘Medically Induced Menopause’—Here’s What That Means
What My First Time Having Sex After Giving Birth Felt Like
The Best Sleeping Bags for Every Adventure
The Beatles’ Method for Making the Studio Comfortable Was Terrible for Their Music
No limit to how low the yen will go – Asia Times
Celtics right the ship, blow out Heat in Game 3: 10 takeaways
Ceretone’s Core One Over-the-Counter Hearing Aids Are Near Invisible, and Barely Helpful
Trending
-
Lifestyle2 hours ago
Colin Jost Wins Over Tough White House Correspondents Dinner Crowd With Praise for ‘Decent’ Biden
-
News3 hours ago
Chinese EV makers zooming by pioneer Tesla – Asia Times
-
News4 hours ago
Biden places politics over strategy in US Steel sale – Asia Times
-
Tech2 hours ago
There’s never been a better time to get into Fallout 76
-
Wellness4 hours ago
I Was Told I Had an STI. It Was Actually Cervical Cancer
-
Tech3 hours ago
Seattle mayor joins tech leaders on Homeland Security’s new AI safety and security board
-
News4 hours ago
‘SNL’ Star Colin Jost Ends Brutal Roast With Heartfelt Biden Endorsement
-
News4 hours ago
Takeaways: Bruins have rattled Maple Leafs on the ropes