Tech Giants Fall in Late Hours on Micron’s Outlook: Markets Wrap

Tech Giants Fall in Late Hours on Micron’s Outlook: Markets Wrap · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Big tech got hit in late US trading after Micron Technology Inc.’s outlook failed to meet the lofty expectations for the industry that has powered the bull market in stocks.

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A $285 billion exchange-traded fund tracking the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) slipped after the maker of computer memory chips projected sales that trailed the estimates of some investors. Micron slumped in late hours, dragging down some chipmakers including giant Nvidia Corp. Also after Wall Street’s close, the Federal Reserve said the biggest US banks passed the annual stress test, paving the way for higher shareholder payouts.

The recent market attempt to broaden out of the megacap group was short-lived, with a bevy of measures still showing how market breadth remains weak — boosting uncertainty about the rally’s staying power. Bifurcation between S&P 500 performance and breadth has reached one of the worst levels in three decades, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

“The stock market is way too reliant on big tech — period and end of story,” said David Bahnsen at The Bahnsen Group. “Whether or not the past week’s volatility in tech is the start of something deeper or if that reckoning is still forthcoming remains to be seen, but excessive investor sentiment, euphoria and overdone momentum always ends the same.”

The S&P 500 edged up to around 5,480. FedEx Corp. surged on a bullish forecast and buyback plans. Amazon.com Inc. reached a $2 trillion valuation in a surge that took the e-commerce giant deeper into record territory.

Treasury 10-year yields topped 4.3%. A $70 billion sale of five-year notes showed signs of good demand. The dollar hit the highest since November. The yen’s slide to the weakest since 1986 is boosting risk of intervention.

“The market’s ‘Engine Warning Light’ is on as we head into the hot summer months,” said Craig Johnson at Piper Sandler. “Investors in the tech-heavy indices are experiencing F.O.M.O, while investors in the rest of the market feel R.O.M.O (regret of missing out) as overall market breadth remains weak outside a handful of mega-cap stocks.”

The S&P 500 is on track to deliver a strongly positive performance for the first six months of the year, fueled by a rally in the market’s largest names. Dividing the 500 Index stocks by capitalization quintiles shows a steady stairstep pattern of performance: the larger the stock, the better it did, according to Jack Ablin at Cresset.