Bond yields ($TNX) diving and the market pricing in a 25 basis point rate cut in September surely translates into another swift leg up in tech stocks ($COMPQ), right?
Hold your horses.
The price action resulted in the exact opposite with big names like Tesla down over 4%.
It was ugly but orderly which is a victory and not of the pyrrhic sort.
The sharp selloff stemmed from a lower-than-expected CPI number.
Decreasing CPI is a strong signal that price inflation is coming down and that is highly conducive to higher stock prices.
However, every inflation report reflecting lower inflation doesn’t guarantee tech stocks in unison will go up.
Tech stocks have done exceptionally well during a backdrop of high rates and high inflation which is extremely unusual.
The market took this opportunity to rotate out of tech and into cheaper stocks that look to benefit more from lower rates.
That’s not saying that tech stocks don’t benefit from lower rates, they certainly do, but the best of the rest has been so beaten down behind the woodshed during this higher rate story that many companies have been on life support and are due for a quick bounce.
The bounce, however, could be short-lived and the bounce could also be given back swiftly.
I suspect a temporary slowdown of tech stocks for the moment will take place while beaten-down sectors get their 15 minutes of fame before they disappear into the background.
I do believe once this short event has worked itself through the system, tech will be off to the races again.
It’s hard to keep tech stocks down because nothing of note has and looks like toppling them.
Presiding over iron-clad balance sheets with Teflon business models and wielding cash cows is the secret recipe to success.
The worst-performing sector in 2024 — real estate — had its best day this year. The Russell 2000 (IWM) climbed 3.6% — the most since November.
US inflation cooled broadly in June to the slowest pace since 2021 on the back of a long-awaited slowdown in housing costs, sending the strongest signal yet that the Fed can cut interest rates soon.
I find this rotation highly beneficial for the overall health of the stock market and it is honestly about time.
Higher rates were starting to turn the screws on many smaller companies.
Many have been in survival mode forcing management into maneuvers like cutting staff, doubling up workloads, trimming expenses, and reducing prices for products.
I do believe that this scarcity mentality will come to an end and this does give more room for other tech companies other than the Magnificent 7 to overperform.
To be honest, the over-reliance on 7 tech stocks to power the tech market is getting a little long in the tooth, and the narrow concentration of alpha is highly irregular and negative for the long-term sustainability of the tech sector.
I would tell readers to get your gunpowder ready because we are setting up for an optimal entry point into tech stocks for the next leg up.
Just be patient.