Why the ‘New Safety Trade’ in Tech Might Not Be So Safe After All

 | May 04, 2023 15:06

There has been a lot of talk in recent months about the narrowness of the rally in stocks so far this year. It’s no secret that the majority of the gains for the index have come from just a handful of stocks, while many smaller names have performed much more poorly in comparison. To wit, together, Microsoft's (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Apple’s (NASDAQ:AAPL) share of the S&P 500 Index just rose to a new record high while the Russell Microcap Index just fell to a new multi-year low.

Some have explained the phenomenon by noting that investors now see Big Tech as the “new safety trade.” “People are looking for safety and comfort given the cross-currents in the market, and tech gives them plenty of ease,” as JP Morgan) sales trader Jack Atherton tells the Financial Times. That ease comes from the belief that Big Tech offers, in the words of Glenmede’s Jason Pride, “downside protection during more difficult times.”

Investors crowding into these names better be right because they are clearly making a major bet that these companies’ financial performance will not only hold up through the economic “cross-currents” to come, it will actually benefit from them. How else can you explain that they are willing to pay 65 times aggregate free cash flow (less stock-based compensation) for the five largest stocks in the Nasdaq (as of last year)?