(Bloomberg) - The outsized sway of technology giants over US stocks is likely to persist, absent a major market rout along the lines of what investors endured in 2022, says JPMorgan Asset Management’s David Kelly.
The firm’s chief global market strategist is among Wall Street pros who expect earnings growth in the S&P 500 Index will broaden beyond the tech behemoths by year-end. But in his view, it likely won’t be enough to close the wide performance gap between those megacap shares and the rest of the US equity benchmark.
That means an extreme blow to market sentiment would be needed to derail the flow of cash into the soaring Big Tech names that have led the market’s advance in 2024, said Kelly, whose firm manages about $3 trillion. Two years ago, for example, tech shares were crushed by the Federal Reserve’s aggressive tightening, and slumped more than the broader market.
“When you have the next bear market, then I think the highest-flying equities are the ones that are going to be most beaten up as indeed they were in 2022,” Kelly said in an interview. “You have to have a shock to market sentiment in order to disrupt the pattern we’re seeing in terms of how people are deploying their money.”
Big technology companies have been sitting atop the stock market for years, but their grip has never been as tight as it is now. A version of the S&P 500 that makes little distinction between Microsoft Corp. and Macy’s Inc. has trailed its cap-weighted peer by 10 percentage points this year, a record January-June underperformance, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Profit growth for the Big Tech stocks is largely expected to slow, while the remaining S&P 500 companies are poised to see earnings accelerate, in the view of many forecasters. Strategists at firms including Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Corp. have said that shift will help lift the rest of the stock market.
Kelly anticipates that the narrowing earnings gap won’t be enough to dim the fervor around artificial intelligence any time soon. To be sure, for investors with a longer horizon, he does recommend seeking opportunities outside of Big Tech, given how stretched those stocks’ valuations have gotten.
Take the S&P 500 Information Technology Index, which in June traded at 31 times expected profits in the next 12 months, compared with a multiple of 21 for the entire S&P 500. That 10-point gap is the widest since 2003, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
“What I think is driving the market is this momentum psychology,” he said. “When you have a particular theme, just a few of those names in the theme seem to attract cash — and a slow change in the distribution of earnings is not really going to be noticed by markets or in investor psychology.”
There are few signs, for now, of that momentum abating. Investors largely expect a soft landing, with solid economic data, the Fed on track to reduce rates and inflation easing.
It’s a “boring” backdrop, Kelly said, adding that “boring is very good for markets.”
By Alexandra Semenova
With assistance from Farah Elbahrawy