Data may be the new oil, but oil is still oil, and the price per barrel of crude oil as we speak is $118.
The high price of energy, amongst other controversial forces, has been the genesis of great pain for tech stocks in 2022 and it was only just 18 months ago Zoom (ZM) had a bigger market cap than Exxon Mobil (XOM).
Fast forward to today, Exxon Mobil is 10x bigger than Zoom.
This is just a sign of the times.
That was then and this is now, and past pricing won't dictate future price and markets can remain irrational much longer than you can stay solvent, but this oil pricing will remain fluid for the foreseeable future.
The cure for higher prices is often said to be higher prices to the further detriment of tech shares.
As we step back for a second and analyze this new world order with new rules, the ‘Facetime on computer’ company ZM SHOULD be worth less than a global oil giant powering civilization.
10 to 1 seems like a mockery of the situation in which the ratio should probably be more like 1000x to 1.
The current price is a reflection of the “good times” in the energy space and tech has by and large been sent to the graveyard.
Concerns that the Fed's rate hikes may induce a recession are keeping investors guessing about the outlook for the economy as rising food and energy costs squeeze consumers, and volatility has picked up.
Therefore, how do we predict the short-term future?
It will clearly be defined by dramatic and volatile stock swings in each direction of the pendulum.
Tech markets, and by default, global markets, since tech is the driving force of the US markets will still indulge in fear of missing out (FOMO) portfolio managers that got whacked the first 6 months of the year, only to try to play catch up to achieve performance targets.
Don’t tell me these people don’t exist, they’ve just been licking their wounds in a more than brutal market setup.
This bear market rally is taking place on the heels of US President Joe Biden using a rare meeting with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to literally paint Powell as the scapegoat.
These meetings usually take place before a selloff because more often than not, people in certain places know horrible inflation numbers are coming down the pipeline hence the scapegoat meeting.
Even if inflation stays stubbornly high, but comes down to 6%, it will still hurt the American consumer which many economists have referred to as the last peg holding up the US stock market and economy.
The momentum we are seeing in this bear market rally won’t be able to hold much longer as American consumers are priced out of housing and credit card delinquency inches up.
Tech earnings won’t be what saves us either as the prospect of downward revisions to earnings estimates is the latest headwind to face stock investors.
We must rejoice around this Nasdaq bear market rally that has seen tech come back to life.
The dominant ecommerce company Amazon has seen a 15% resurgence and left-wing biased streaming company Netflix (NFLX) has recovered 15% from their lows too.
But we need to remember that since February 2022, this is a new world with a new set of rules.
Oil is more important than seeing your coworkers on a video chat, yet the inverse was true before February.
In this new world, tech and its share prices simply don’t stack up like they used to compared to other asset classes.
That being said, tech won’t go up in a straight line from this bear market rally, and that’s certainly better than the kamikaze-esque price action we saw the first half of the year.
The Mad Hedge Technology Letter will pick our spots, but I am not convinced in going completely bullish or 100% bearish at this point in the deleveraging cycle.