Big Tech's Fall from Grace: From Market Leaders to Questionable Bets
For years, Big Tech companies have been the cornerstone of the US stock market, but recent trends show a significant shift. As trade policies and economic uncertainties impact their performance, investors are questioning whether these giants can reclaim their dominant positions.
Real Estate News:For most of the past decade, a handful of high-flying technology companies have pushed the US stock market to record highs and become cornerstones of investment portfolios. But that’s collapsed this year.
Despite the S&P 500 Index clawing back into the green for 2025 after being whipsawed by President Donald Trump’s vacillating trade policies, tech giants like Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc., and Tesla Inc. are still down. The Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Index — which includes these companies as well as Meta Platforms Inc., Microsoft Corp., and Nvidia Corp. — is underperforming the S&P 500. If this trend holds through Dec. 31, it would make this just the second year in the last 10 where that’s happened.
It’s a far cry from last year, when technology and telecommunications stocks both rose more than 35% to lead the S&P 500’s 23% gain. This year, typically lagging groups like industrials, utilities, and financials are driving the stock market’s rebound. Whether Big Tech can re-establish its historical dominance in 2025 is the existential question facing investors as they start positioning for the back half of the year.
“The market is starting to look back more at individual stocks and companies and financial strength and innovation rather than letting the uncertainty around tariffs and where they may go really dominate the conversation,” said Rick Gardner, chief investment officer at RGA Investments. “And if you want to start talking about the US economy and you want to start talking about technology, that’s a really bright story.”
Gardner has been buying Big Tech stocks for his clients over the past month as the market has rebounded but they’ve languished. He’s not alone. Signs are emerging that professional traders are increasingly wading back in after slashing equity positioning amid the economic uncertainty triggered by Trump’s global trade war. For example, hedge funds on Tuesday snapped up US equities at the fastest pace since April 9, the day the S&P 500 soared 9.5% after Trump announced his tariff reprieve, according to Goldman Sachs’ prime brokerage desk. Technology stocks were the biggest beneficiaries of the buying.
The flipside of this optimism is the reality that tech stocks have had a massive runup over the past few years, and with the economy in flux, the risk is these shares could have much more room to fall. Betting on Big Tech a decade ago resulted in a gain of 2,179%, compared with 181% for the S&P 500, excluding dividends.
“I think we’re going to stall out here,” Lisa Shalett, Morgan Stanley’s chief investment officer, said Friday in an interview with Bloomberg Surveillance. “It’s hard to justify the numbers.”
Hedge fund manager Michael Burry, who’s famous for his 2008 bet against the housing market that was featured in “The Big Short,” bought put options, which profit from price declines, on Nvidia in the first quarter, according to the latest 13F regulatory filing by his firm, Scion Asset Management. However, the filing also added a note that the securities “may serve to hedge long positions which are not eligible to be reported.”
The stock market’s big “what if” question is: If those Big Tech laggards start to outperform again, what does that mean for the S&P 500? The Magnificent Seven accounts for about a third of the benchmark’s market capitalization. So if the mega-tech index, which is down 4.2% for the year compared with a 1.3% rise in the S&P 500, reverses course and takes the lead, how much does the S&P rally?
“I think all-time highs are possible,” Gardner said. “I would hate to be the one betting against our technology industry and innovation right now.”
He has a point, since the S&P 500 bottomed on April, tech stocks have led the way higher, with the sector rising 31% compared with a 20% gain for the entire index.
Of course, not all Big Tech stocks have been underperformers this year. Meta Platforms is up 9.4% to lead the Magnificent Seven, while Microsoft has gained 7.8%. Both have limited exposure to tariffs and posted better-than-expected earnings results. Nvidia, which reports on May 28, is roughly flat for 2025.
Betting on a tech rally comes with its own risks. Trump could resume his hard-line approach to tariffs when his 90-day pause ends in July. And the jury is still out on whether a demand shock from his levies will derail the US economic expansion and cause inflation to flare up again.
So far businesses have absorbed most of the costs from Trump’s tariffs, but Walmart Inc. said in its earnings report last week that consumers will start to see higher prices soon as it works through inventory and begins to pass on the expense of newer merchandise. Meanwhile, US consumer sentiment is at the second-lowest level on record and inflation expectations are at multi-decade highs, according to the monthly survey by the University of Michigan.
While the factors weighing on big tech laggards vary, the common challenge most of them face is exposure to China, which has been hit with the highest tariffs by the Trump administration. For instance, the majority of Apple’s most important device, the iPhone, are still mostly made in China, and the country accounted for 17% of its 2024 revenue, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company earlier this month reported a 2% decline in China sales in its fiscal second quarter, short of analyst expectations. Apple has lost more than $700 billion in market value since closing at a record on Dec. 26 and is now worth less than Microsoft and Nvidia.
Alphabet, meanwhile, faces mounting concerns about risks to its Google search business from artificial intelligence chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Searches on Apple’s Safari web browser fell for the first time in April, an Apple executive said in court testimony last week.
Still, hope for equity investors remains. In many ways, the most encouraging sign for the stock market has been the S&P 500’s ability to rebound without big tech companies leading, according to George Maris, chief investment officer and global head of equities at Principal Asset Management.
“You don’t necessarily need the largest capitalization securities to do great for a good, constructive market,” he said. “You probably have a healthier market, a healthier, more fundamentally-oriented market, if you have greater participation across the investment universe.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What has caused the decline in Big Tech stocks this year?
The decline in Big Tech stocks this year is largely due to economic uncertainties, trade policies, and exposure to tariffs, particularly on China. These factors have impacted the performance of companies like Apple, Alphabet, and Amazon.
How have other sectors performed compared to Big Tech?
Other sectors like industrials, utilities, and financials have driven the stock market’s rebound this year, outperforming the typically dominant Big Tech companies.
What are the risks of betting on a tech rally?
Betting on a tech rally comes with risks, including the potential for further economic uncertainties and the possibility that demand shocks from tariffs could derail the US economic expansion and cause inflation to rise.
How have some Big Tech companies fared better than others?
Some Big Tech companies like Meta Platforms and Microsoft have performed better due to limited exposure to tariffs and better-than-expected earnings results.
What is the outlook for the S&P 500 if Big Tech stocks recover?
If Big Tech stocks recover, it could significantly boost the S&P 500, as the Magnificent Seven companies account for about a third of the benchmark’s market capitalization.