Is it time to dump tech?
Short term, yes - long term, no.
Recently, a series of big tech earnings misses throttled the market tearing into the positive investor sentiment, which was holding up nicely after the early year sell-offs.
Every precipitous and steep drop this year has followed with a mammoth dip buying spree lifting stocks to newer highs.
This is the type of robustness investors rejoice in when talking about the price action of technology stocks.
Not only is the dip buying awe-inspiring, but the lack of hesitation in the dip buying is even more impressive.
Investors have scant time to pick up these precious names before the entry points disappear like an invisibility cloak.
Ditch these stocks at your peril, because the buying queue represents the likes of all the tech behemoths waiting to buy back their own stock, namely Warren Buffett, and the flight to quality brigade that view big cap stocks as a de-facto cash sanctuary.
The anxiety was palpable when Netflix's (NFLX) management badly miscalculated new subscription business after a brilliant earnings report from Microsoft.
Investors got another wrench in their stomach when Facebook (FB) followed Netflix with dismal guidance ripping apart the growth narrative and pivoting toward ameliorating its controversial business model giving investors a fresh dose of uncertainty.
All eyes were planted on Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Apple to provide some calm to the markets.
That's exactly what they did.
Part of the problem now is that expectations are so exaggerated, these companies have little wiggle room to overdeliver.
Industry specialists largely believe tech profits to rise 20.9% YOY this earnings season. The lion's share of the growth has been contained to the headliner names such as Amazon, which has grown like no company has ever grown before.
Estimates show a slide in YOY tech profits for the third-quarter earnings decelerating down to less than 15%. While still good, it's not the 20% growth YOY, and over that it has been fueling tech's rise in increasingly precarious market conditions.
The downshift in profit growth has been anticipated for the past few quarters, as investors thought a trip wire would at some point bring down the entire FANG group.
What we have found out is that not all FANGs are created equal. Some are more equal than others.
The past earnings performance indicated this with Amazon's emphatic top-line growth numbers blowing away the most adamant bear.
Netflix's narrative is still intact, and consolidation is badly needed for a stock that has gone parabolic in 2018.
The short-term capitulation of Facebook and Netflix is proof that large cap tech also has downside risk embedded in its model.
It was starting to seem like down days were never in the cards.
Lowered tech guidance for next quarter will really test the market's resiliency during next earnings season.
If these numbers miss spectacularly, expect the tech sector to give back a good chunk of the year's gains back.
Decelerating profits is never a positive sign. However, after coming from Mt. Everest profit levels, will the markets brush it off and power higher?
There is a lot more juice left in this tech story, and sharp corrections should still be bought.
Tech is becoming quite frothy at these levels and choosing the right tech story will go a long way to sleeping well at night.
It will be excruciatingly difficult for tech companies to impressively beat on the upside next quarter.
However, the secular story and unique earnings growth are treasures compared to other sectors that are getting beaten into submission.
When you delve into the numbers, the success becomes comical.
Apple is the first company to cross the $1 trillion of market cap.
This company prints money to the tune of $11 billion in profits each quarter.
It possesses a devoted userbase, surging software and services segment, and premium grade smartphones allowing Apple to cash in profits to the extent they do.
CEO Tim Cook sent an email to Apple's employees downplaying the milestone, instead saying "financial returns are simply the result of Apple's innovation."
He is completely correct.
The innovation has fed back through spiking profits and boosting sales allowing Apple to make money hand over fist.
This in turn is a big reason why Apple's share price has almost quadrupled with Cook at the helm.
The best and brightest tech companies in 2018 share one unified trait: innovation.
And it is not a surprise that Amazon and Microsoft (MSFT) will be next to join the trillion-dollar club as they boast some of the most innovative staff in the world.
As these two companies pass the trillion-dollar market cap, it will encourage the next tier of flourishing tech companies to make the jump to the trillion-dollar club.
The tech sector is still eating everybody's lunch with every business in the world migrating to their front yard.
Some weakness in the extended tech shares have been a matter of when and not if.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) is a stock gaining 22.8% just in the month of July underlining the overheated price action of some of these tech names.
I am largely staying away from chip stocks now because trade tensions have bred uncertainty around Chinese chip revenues.
The tech sector has many moving parts and a trade war can hurt one part of tech while others remain unblemished.
Another front of concern is data regulation headlines rearing their ugly heads from time to time.
There are more hurdles for tech stocks going forward, but that does not mean they will get tripped up.
I am in a tech holding pattern until I find an opening to issue my next slew of tech trade alerts.
Year Over Year Profit Growth
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Quote of the Day
"I will always choose a lazy person to do a difficult job because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it." - said founder of Microsoft Corporation Bill Gates.