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Tech investors are suffering the second stocks rout of the COVID pandemic—and Wall Street thinks it could get far worse

By
Bernhard Warner
Bernhard Warner
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By
Bernhard Warner
Bernhard Warner
Down Arrow Button Icon
February 21, 2022, 5:48 AM ET

Towards the end of 2020, once we learned a COVID-19 vaccine was ready for the masses, Wall Street began to warn investors of a new markets dynamic. High-growth tech stocks would fall out of favor with investors, the message went. In its place, overlooked value stocks—think energy and consumer staples—would make a comeback.

Wall Street nailed the forecast.

So far in 2022, once high-flying tech stocks are taking it on the chin, with the Nasdaq down 14.4% year-to-date, and down 16.4% since hitting an all-time high in mid-November, just before the Omicron wave arrived to batter the developed world.

To be sure, very few stock-picking pros are calling this the bottom.

“While there are plenty of reasonably valued and profitable companies in the market, there are many more dangerously overvalued and unprofitable companies whose stocks could fall much further, and some even to zero,” David Trainer, CEO of Nashville-based investment research firm, New Constructs, tells Fortune.

Even before Omicron, investors were treating a large basket of growth stocks—names like Zoom, PayPal and the companies you’d find in Cathie Wood’s Ark Innovation ETF, all of which soared during the latter half of 2020—as if it were the plague.

Once investors got a whiff that top-line growth for these companies was slowing, they started to cash out. In many cases, the latest rout in tech stocks has been far more damaging to investor portfolios than what we saw during the stock market collapse of February and March 2020, just after the World Health Organization declared COVID to be a pandemic.

PayPal, Netflix and Meta in freefall

PayPal is one such company that’s getting punished by investors. The stock closed on Friday at $103.65, 15% below its 2020 pre-pandemic high. The collapse in PayPal shares has been nothing short of breathtaking. From its March, 2020 low, shares more than tripled over the next 15 months as usage and revenues soared. And then, just as quickly, the shares collapsed, shedding billions in value as growth started flatlining.

The digital payments specialist has now lost two-thirds of its value since its mid-summer 2021 all-time high. The gutting loss has been particularly painful for PayPal bulls. The share-price collapse over the past seven months has been twice as dramatic as what investors saw in those dark days of February and March 2020.

As the chart below shows, PayPal is hardly alone.

Netflix, Facebook parent Meta, and Twitter have also seen bigger hits to their share prices in this latest round of sell-offs than what occurred in the early days of COVID. The light-colored red line in the chart measures the share sell-off during the epic February-March 2020 sell-off. Let’s call that Round One. The darker red line above measures the Round Two carnage, calculated as the share-price performance of these stocks since their most recent all-time high and Friday’s closing price.

One stock that's not on the chart: Moderna. The Nasdaq-listed vaccine specialist, and a symbol of investors' now-dashed exuberance for growth-stocks, is down 71% since its August all-time high.

Boom, bust, repeat

If investors learned anything from the dot-com sell-off a generation ago, it's that tech stocks are vulnerable to boom-bust cycles. On his blog this weekend, Ben Carlson, a portfolio manager at Ritholtz Wealth Management and a regular Fortune columnist, took a stab at answering the provocative question: How long does it take for tech stocks to recover?

The bad news: the historical record isn't great. He notes that it took Microsoft 16 years to return to its 1999 all-time high, and that Intel and Cisco still trade well below those glory days.

"Tech stocks," he writes, "are prone to these boom-bust cycles because innovation always causes bubbles. We simply can’t help ourselves.

"I’m not saying today’s tech stocks that are getting killed are in for a similar extended winter," he continues. "But growth investors also shouldn’t assume all of these stocks that are down 50-80% are going to be back at new highs in a hurry."

Zoom in to the last year, and you see just how bad the constituent parts of the Nasdaq are performing in recent months. Carlson lays out the bad news in the following tweet:

Nasdaq Composite stocks from 52 week highs:

Half of the stocks in the index are down 30% or worse

40% of stocks are down 40% or worse

35% of stocks are down 50% or worse

28% of stocks are down 60% or worse

— Ben Carlson (@awealthofcs) February 18, 2022

Buy the dip?

Even after such a sharp sell-off, analysts still see many of these hobbled tech stocks as too pricey.

"With some tech stocks like Meta Platforms, Twitter and Nvidia, we believe we are only seeing early signs of capitulation and there is plenty of more downside ahead from here," Trainer reckons. He also takes issue with meme stocks. A few darlings of the Reddit crowd—Robinhood, AMC Entertainment and Bed Bath & Beyond—are down 86%, 75% and 69%, respectively, off their all-time highs.

His advice: stay away from meme stocks. Far away.

"No matter what the latest investing trend is, fundamentals will always matter. The meme stock trader's don't understand this, and quite frankly, they may never understand this," he adds.

Check out this Fortune must-read: “Why Wall Street thinks the metaverse will be worth trillions”

About the Author
By Bernhard Warner
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