There is literally no possible scenario in a post-second-wave lockdown where the 7 tech stocks of Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Netflix, Facebook, and Amazon don’t shoot the lights out unless the world ceases to exist.
25,891 – that is the number of new coronavirus cases registered in the U.S. on June 13th, 2020 which is about in line with the recent near-term peaks of total daily U.S. coronavirus cases.
Why is this important?
Traders are calculating whether a “second wave” will possibly rear its ugly head to crush the frothy momentum in tech stocks.
That is where we are at now in the tech market.
Tech stocks could possibly ride another magnificent ride up in share appreciation if the reopening of the economy can kick into second gear.
Skeptics are sounding the alarms that this is not even the “second wave” and we still in the latter half of the first wave.
Consensus has it that this could be just a head fake.
The jitters are real with recent dive in tech shares.
The five biggest tech companies burned more than $269 billion in value last Thursday - the worst day for U.S. stocks since March and the 25th worst day in stock market history.
Nasdaq stocks ended the day largely 5% in the red with Microsoft shedding $80 billion in market cap in just one day.
Larger drops were led by IBM who lost 9% and Cisco who lost 8%.
It was a dreadful day at the office, to say the least.
We are teetering on a knife's edge and the tension is running high in the White House with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin already announcing that the U.S. can’t afford another lockdown.
It’s not up to him in the end, it’s about how consumers will assess the confronted health risks.
Tech will undoubtedly be dragged down with the rest on the next lockdown sparing few survivors.
The housing market might actually go down as well as the initial push to the suburbs will dissipate and fresh forbearances will explode higher.
Consumers might not even have the cash to pay for their monthly Apple phone service or internet bill if the worst-case scenario manifests itself.
The health scare has already dented new software purchases by small and medium businesses (SMBs) and tech companies in industries such as travel, retail, and hospitality; online ad spending by the likes of automakers and online travel agencies; and smartphone, automotive and industrial chip purchases.
Small business has held off on reducing their tech software spending too much on the expectation that macro conditions will perform a V-shaped recovery.
Numerous tech firms have cited “demand stabilization,” but it’s not guaranteed to last if we revert to another lockdown.
If a lockdown happens again, it will be another referendum on Fed’s enormous liquidity impulses versus the drop in real earnings or flat out losses to tech business models.
Even with the media’s onslaught of vicious fearmongering campaigns, I do believe this is the time for long-term investors to scale into the best of tech such as Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Netflix.
If you thought these 7 companies had anti-trust issues before, then look away.
We could gradually head into an economy where up to 40% of the public markets comprise of only 7 tech stocks which is at a mind-boggling 25% now.
Never waste a good crisis – tech is following through like no other sector!
Bonds don’t make money anymore and hiding out now means putting your life savings into these 7 premium tech stocks.
In the short-term, this is a good opportunity for a tactical bullish tech trade.