BCN-04,05 Tech stars see shares dim in eyes of investors

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Tech stars see shares dim in eyes of investors

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Technology companies that
catapulted Wall Street to glorious heights have seen shares tumble on
investor concerns that the days of stellar profits are waning.

Since their most recent peaks, Amazon lost 18.5 percent, Apple 17 percent,
Netflix 23 percent, and Google-parent Alphabet 14 percent.

And the tumble came after Amazon was briefly valued, based on share price,
at more than a trillion dollars, and as the e-commerce colossus heads into
what should be a money-making year-end holiday shopping season.

The mood worsened early this month for Apple after it released a
disappointing sales forecast for the final quarter of this year.

Investors anticipating fewer iPhones as holiday gifts knocked Apple off
its pedestal as a rarity with a trillion-dollar market valuation.

Analysts contended that US tech titans driving Wall Street trends fell
because conditions drove them stunningly high, and circumstances change along
with company fortunes.

“Investors have really piled into the tech sector since the Brexit,” said
Nasdaq analyst Jack Menke.

He recalled the sector climbing an average of seven percent in the nine
quarters following the British vote because, faced with uncertainties in
Europe, investors were drawn to the potential of high returns on US tech
companies in a low interest environment.

– Tax cut boost –

US President Donald Trump’s tax reform passed late last year set the stage
for tech companies to reap windfalls in the first two quarters of 2018,
driven by tax savings that paved the way for big spending on buying back
shares or paying out dividends.

“We are facing a natural correction,” Menke said of the share price drops
of leading tech companies in recent weeks.

Essentially, after rocketing due to an alignment of economic planets, it
is time for tech shares to return to earth.

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The US Federal Reserve central banking system is firmly committed to
interest rate hikes that increase borrowing costs for households and
businesses, potentially leading to lower demand as people either borrow less
or spend more to pay for debt.

The rise in US interest rates has also helped increase the value of the
dollar, which companies translate into a “headwind” making their products
more expensive abroad.

Meanwhile, US economic growth that remains strong might slow, which could
contribute to a global recession. This was illustrated in October by China
reporting its weakest quarterly growth in nine years.

From chatting on iPhones to shopping at Amazon and binge-watching on
Netflix, these technologies are woven into daily lives of billions of people,
tying the fortunes of companies to rises or falls of local economies around
the world.

Between Trump’s trade war and the decline in global economic prospects,
investors see “higher risks of a recession compared to the last 12 months,”
according to Manulife AM senior portfolio manager Nate Thooft.

– Ripple effect –

Companies that have thrived as suppliers or partners to US tech giants are
starting to feel the ripple effect.

Lumentum, which supplies Apple with technology used for a facial
recognition feature in iPhones, saw its shares plunge more than 30 percent on
Wall Street after revealing it is reducing shipments to one of its largest
customers.

Lumentum did not name the customer. But all eyes went to Apple, shares of
which took a hit on worries that iPhone demand is weakening. Apple makes most
of its money from iPhone sales.

Decline of investor confidence in robust returns from tech companies makes
them less willing to keeping paying premiums for shares on anticipation of
stellar performance on the horizon.

“I don’t think tech stocks are too expensive, but traders are less willing
to pay a premium for these stocks,” Thooft said.

A formula traditionally used for comparing share prices with company
profit shows that valuation is more reasonable than it was before the dot-com
internet bubble burst in the early 2000s.

Another risk factor facing tech companies is increased regulation ranging
from the handling of people’s data to free speech, fairness, and the
truthfulness of content or who is behind it.

Despite recent elections that divided the US Congress between Republican
and Democrats, regulatory change in the tech sector “is one issue they could
agree on,” Thooft said.

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