Investment Strategies
Tech Stocks Rallied Last Week But Remain Pressured – Citigroup

The US banking group takes a look at the tech sector, particularly the larger names that have seen their shares slump this year. Late last week, slightly less-severe US inflation figures cheered investors, sending indices up sharply. But it is premature to think that the Fed is going to "pivot" on tighter monetary policy, Citigroup says.
Tech stocks may have sunk this year before getting some respite
late last week on better-than-expected US inflation data, but
it’s premature for investors to jump back in. When they re-enter
the space, they should focus on profitable businesses rather than
speculative “moonshots,” Citigroup said in a
note.
The US banking group said long-term prospects for technology
stocks look positive but in the near term, the sector is not out
of the wood, given concerns about higher borrowing costs and a
possible global recession.
Late last week, markets rallied strongly following official US
inflation data that came in below 8 per cent for the first time
in eight months. The figures encouraged investors to think that
the Federal Reserve might not tighten monetary policy further as
aggressively as previously thought. The S&P 500 and the
tech-heavy Nasdaq closed at 5.5 per cent and 7.4 per cent higher
on Thursday, respectively. These were the largest daily rises in
more than two-and-a-half years.
Such a move came after months in which technology stocks, such as
prominent firms Amazon, Meta (aka Facebook) and Google have been
hit hard. The stocks did well during the pandemic when home
working and lockdowns prompted millions to download videos and
order items online.
Citigroup reminded clients of how sharp the declines of 2022 have
been. The five largest US tech giants have lost over $3 trillion
in market cap since the start of the year. The S&P 100 IT
sector has dropped 25 per cent year-to-date, while the Nasdaq is
down 28 per cent.
Investors must wait for some improvement to come, Citigroup
said.
“We acknowledge that valuations reflect new, higher capital costs
and more conservative growth estimates, but immediate increases
in profits and dividends are unlikely. After this 3Q reporting
season, it is clear that tech won’t be spared from this
particular downturn,” the bank continued.
“We now see tech valuations that are much closer to longer-run
averages. While we expect interest rates to fall later in 2023, a
challenging earnings' backdrop is likely to initially offset some
modest re-rating toward higher PE [price-earnings] tech multiples
in 2023,” it said.
“We continue to prefer quality names with less economic
sensitivity, which in practice means a bias toward profitable
tech over unprofitable moonshots,” Citigroup said.
The bank said that even if the Fed is less aggressive on interest
rates, the central bank is far from making a “true policy
pivot.”
“In the meantime, slowing economic growth is unlikely to spare
these large platforms. Though fintech and e-commerce firms
operate with a smaller physical footprint and less capital than
banks and big-box retailers, they are likely to see slowing sales
in the coming quarters as discretionary consumer spending
fades. And for other tech segments, the likely deferment of
capital expenditures by some firms will pressure bottom lines,”
the bank said.
The bank pointed out that just a year ago, valuations for the US information technology sector were trading at their most expensive levels since the dot-com bubble. Multiples that were acceptable when interest rates were low have had to re-adjust to a sharply rising cost of capital and a rapid shift in preference among investors for near-term cash flows. Citi now sees tech valuations that are much closer to longer-run averages (see chart below). While the bank expects interest rates to fall later in 2023, a challenging earnings backdrop is likely to initially offset some modest re-rating toward higher PE tech multiples in 2023.
Tactically, the bank said it is reluctant to chase higher moves up in tech stocks until the economic picture clarifies.