$1.3 trillion came and went in less than a month and people didn’t even notice. Amazing.
From WOLF STREET by Wolf Richter.
The week was marked by a continued sell-off in tech stocks and a wilting of the much-touted “rotation” into smaller caps. The S&P 500 fell 2.0%, the Nasdaq Composite fell 3.6%, the Nasdaq 100 fell 4.0% and the Magnificent 7 fell 4.7%.
However, the Russell 2000, which tracks about 2,000 small-cap stocks, surged 5.3% in the first two days of the week as part of a “rotation” into smaller caps, before falling 3.5% over the remaining three days of the week, and ending the week up 1.7%, back to February 2021 levels.
The Mag 7 market cap fell another $113 billion on Friday, bringing the total decline from the July 10 peak to $1.32 trillion (-7.7%). That $1.32 trillion was spread across just seven stocks and vanished in about a month without anyone even noticing. It’s amazing when you think about it – it was a significant amount of money at one time.
The combined market capitalization of the seven companies has now fallen to $15.69 trillion, down from over $17 trillion on July 10. The market capitalization of the seven major companies is back to where it was on June 13. This $1.32 trillion drop is still well above the dollar drop in April (-$1.13 trillion), but the 7.7% drop is still below the 8.1% drop in April.
Mag 7 individual stocks down from their July 10th peaks (Nvidia rebounded on Thursday but fell again on Friday).
Apple (AAPL): -3.6% (-$129 billion), Microsoft (MSFT): -6.3% (-$217 billion), Alphabet (GOOG): -6.9% (-$164 billion), Amazon (AMZN): -8.3% (-$173 billion), Tesla (TSLA): -9.2% (-$78 billion), Meta (META): -10.8% (-$146 billion), Nvidia (NVDA): -12.3% (-$410 billion).
Looking at percentages over the past 12 months, two of the Mag 7s stand out.
Nvidia, despite its recent decline, is still up 150% over the past 12 months (red line in the chart below). Tesla is still down 18% over the past 12 months, and is down 42% from its all-time high in February 2021 (green).
The remaining five companies’ 12-month gains are smaller than Nvidia’s 150% gain, but they’re still high despite their recent declines.
Meta: +50.9%, Alphabet: +46.1%, Amazon: +35.3%, Microsoft: +23.1%, Apple: +15.0%.
Small cap stocks took a nosedive on Wednesday, July 17th, after a sudden boom that had seemingly resulted in a market-wide “influx” into small cap stocks.
The Russell 2000 surged 11.5% over the five trading days from July 9 to July 16. The index began to decline on Wednesday, closing 3.5% down on Friday from Tuesday’s high, but a 5.3% surge in the first two days of the week meant the index was still up 1.7% for the week overall.
The Russell 2000 was at 2,184, back to the levels seen in February 2021. Such sudden spikes and falls certainly do nothing to ease our fears.
The Nasdaq 100 Index, which tracks the 100 largest nonfinancial stocks listed on the Nasdaq and is dominated by big technology and social media companies, has fallen 4.0% this week and is down 5.6% from its peak on July 10.
The index is up 16% so far this year despite two sell-offs, the first of which in April ended with a 6.2% drop.
The index is still up 51.5% since the start of 2021, with some big troughs along the way, and has surged 88% since the trough in December 2022. This dizzying run to higher heights has done nothing to ease our fears.
The S&P 500 is only just beginning to show the first effects of the tech industry drama. So far, the sell-off has been slight: The index is down 2% this week and is down 2.9% from Tuesday’s high.
The index has surged 47% since the start of 2021. Since the bottom in October 2022, the index has surged 53%. These are sharp gains on top of already sky-high valuations, with almost zero declines to date.
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