fbpx

Tech Stock Retreat vs The Landing

Your capital is at risk if you invest. You could lose all your investment. Please see the full risk warning here.

Websim is the retail division of Intermonte, the primary intermediary of the Italian stock exchange for institutional investors. Leverage Shares often features in its speculative analysis based on macros/fundamentals. However, the information is published in Italian. To provide better information for our non-Italian investors, we bring to you a quick translation of the analysis they present to Italian retail investors. To ensure rapid delivery, text in the charts will not be translated. The views expressed here are of Websim. Leverage Shares in no way endorses these views. If you are unsure about the suitability of an investment, please seek financial advice. View the original at

Almost as if a switch was pressed, the Nasdaq Composite – which encapsulates almost all Nasdaq-listed stocks – collapsed 1.63% in the first day of trading from the highs of 2023. This was the 4th worst start to a new year since 1972 and only the 5th time that it has started a year with a one-day drop of more than 1.5%. In the first week of the year, the index fell another 1.64%.

Within the “tech heavy” Nasdaq-100, pharmaceuticals ruled the roost in terms of momentum; tech was virtually nowhere to be seen in the Top 25 list – a massive shift in trends seen in Q3 and Q4 of 2023.

In holistic terms, the index isn’t rising: the one-day drop for the Nasdaq-100 in the new year was 1.68%. As of the first week of the year, the index shed another 1.44%.

The “broad market” S&P 500 was relatively muted: its one-day drop in the new year was 0.57% and it dropped another 0.96% in the first week of the year. Pharmaceuticals and financial services ruled the roost in the Top 25 list.

The biggest drop over the week, however, was witnessed in the small-cap Russell 2000 which pulled back by 3.1%. Its one-day drop in the new year was 0.7%. The top gainers in this index were almost exclusively pharmaceutical companies.

Whether these early trends portend general market directionality in the year to come might be aided (or hindered) by overall institutional outlook for the year, which ranges from optimistic to neutral.

Institutional Outlook

In its outlook for 2024, British investment bank Barclays opined1 that 2024 will be a particularly muddled year for the Western Hemisphere.

While the Hemisphere is expected to see lower year-on-year Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation, the United States will see a 17% increase in the unemployment rate along with a 50% decrease in private consumption. No region – be it the U.S., the U.K. or the Continent – will experience GDP growth.

The drop in consumption is a particularly ominous indicator for the technology sector: without significant buy-ins, forward valuations and investor convictions get shaky. As the Blackrock Investment Institute2 indicated, “tech” enjoyed a conviction premium throughout 2023 and ended the year with a nearly 155% outperformance against the “broad market”.

France’s Amundi – Europe’s largest asset manager in Europe and one of the world’s 10 biggest investment managers – estimates3 that wage growth in the U.S. has peaked and will slide lower in the year ahead.

Given that CPI inflation is expected to drop, that drop in wage growth might have a certain rationale. Then why the drop in personal consumption? This is a more complex and multi-factored issue that is not certainly helped by the fact that the average U.S. consumer/resident has been saddled with rising costs far in excess of wage growth for well over a decade now. The “weight of macro consequences” is a slow-moving iceberg seldom addressable with simple measures.

As the U.S. prepares for arguably one of the most contentious elections in modern history, economists and forecasters have been particularly wary of making prognostications, especially after market cool-offs and sector rotations didn’t materialize as expected in 2023. Some have substituted the term “recession” with musings on whether a “landing” will be “hard” or “soft”. Presently, consensus is inching towards a “soft landing” over the hard. However, Germany’s Allianz Global Investors – a subsidiary of the world’s largest insurance company – noted in its outlook4 that forecasters’ consensus opinions have been wrong on virtually every recession since the eighties:

One feature that stands out is that nearly every recessionary event was almost immediately preceded by a low probability consensus of said recession occurring.

Another assumed truism is that an “American” recession tends to spell doom for the global market and economy as well. In its outlook for 2024, BNY Mellon outlines5 that this may not happen. After a high water mark around 2010 – itself marking the last significant recessionary event (the Global Financial Crisis (GFC)) – Emerging Markets (EM) have been increasingly uncoupled from Developed Markets (DM).

This highlights an often-stated yet frequently-derided trend broadly referred to as “deglobalization”. In effect, the notion of a “global driver” is increasingly less viable.

A Change in the Air

“Deglobalization” is merely one of many indicators that classical models are being challenged. One “classic” is the bond-equities relationship which most investors broadly understand as a “flight to safety” paradigm from equities to bonds when the former looks shaky and vice versa when the outlook has stabilized. Barclays asserted that bond-equity correlations, a key measure for asset allocation strategies, have shot up to levels last seen twenty years ago (i.e. circa the dot-com bubble).

At current levels of correlation, the bank states that bonds do not act as the shock absorbers to equities as they have done in the past.

Another “classic model” being challenged is an investor favourite: the “buy and hold”. As per studies by the BlackRock Investment Institute, investors who get “granular” with their portfolio allocations have tended to thrive over those with “static” portfolios.

With a wide arsenal of tools and strategies to help outperform static portfolios, BlackRock asserts that investment expertise is likely to give portfolios an edge by enabling more effective core allocations, implementing “alpha” ideas and hedging risk.

Key Takeaways

In the 2024 market outlook article published last month6, it was opined that AI, for better or for worse is here to stay and will continue to have a strong influence in investor conviction at least in the near- to mid-term. While it’s certainly well within reason to hold forth that America’s tech stocks being heavily overvalued relative to the rest of the market is a headwind, AI-related developments will continue to be regarded as tailwinds for the constituents of the sector. A similar tilt in favour is expected to be writ large in the private market as well.

With deeply-held notions being challenged (or even potentially altered forever), it likely would pay – more so now than ever – if investors were to eschew the hype around favourites, examine closely ideas considered to be “fundamental” and explore new strategies available. Professional investors should consider the potential inherent within tactical trading using leveraged ETPs. Click here for a complete list of Leverage Shares’ products.


  1. “Outlook 2024: A year of hard choices”, Barclays, 13 November 2023
  2. “2024 Global Investment Outlook”, BlackRock Investment Institute, 5 December 2023
  3. “2024 Investment Outlook”, Amundi Investment Institute, 23 November 2023
  4. “Outlook 2024: targeting opportunities”, Allianz Global Investors, 22 November 2023
  5. “2024 Capital Market Assumptions: The Path to Normalization”, BNY Mellon Wealth Management, 21 November 2023
  6. “S&P 500: 2023 Highs and the Year Ahead”, Leverage Shares, 15 December 2023
Your capital is at risk if you invest. You could lose all your investment. Please see the full risk warning here.

Related Posts

Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Sandeep Rao
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Violeta Todorova
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Boyan Girginov
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Violeta Todorova
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Sandeep Rao
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Q2 is poised for European stocks’ turnaround and rising interest in energy stocks
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Violeta Todorova
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East threatens to derail the economic recovery.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Boyan Girginov
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
March’s CPI rise undermines the Fed’s hopes for a soft landing.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Violeta-540x540-1.jpg
Violeta Todorova
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.
Stocks are off to a rough start in the new quarter as inflation persists.

Sandeep Rao

Research

Sandeep joined Leverage Shares in September 2020. He leads research on existing and new product lines, asset classes, and strategies, with special emphasis on analysis of recent events and developments.

Sandeep has longstanding experience with financial markets. Starting with a Chicago-based hedge fund as a financial engineer, his career has spanned a variety of domains and organizations over a course of 8 years – from Barclays Capital’s Prime Services Division to (most recently) Nasdaq’s Index Research Team.

Sandeep holds an M.S. in Finance as well as an MBA from Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago.

Julian Manoilov

Marketing Lead

Julian joined Leverage Shares in 2018 as part of the company’s primary expansion in Eastern Europe. He is responsible for web content and raising brand awareness.

Julian has been academically involved with economics, psychology, sociology, European politics & linguistics. He has experience in business development and marketing through business ventures of his own.

For Julian, Leverage Shares is an innovator in the field of finance & fintech, and he always looks forward with excitement to share the next big news with investors in the UK & Europe.

Violeta Todorova

Senior Research

Violeta joined Leverage Shares in September 2022. She is responsible for conducting technical analysis, macro and equity research, providing valuable insights to help shape investment strategies for clients.

Prior to joining LS, Violeta worked at several high-profile investment firms in Australia, such as Tollhurst and Morgans Financial where she spent the past 12 years of her career.

Violeta is a certified market technician from the Australian Technical Analysts Association and holds a Post Graduate Diploma of Applied Finance and Investment from Kaplan Professional (FINSIA), Australia, where she was a lecturer for a number of years.

Oktay Kavrak

Head of Communications and Strategy

Oktay joined Leverage Shares in late 2019. He is responsible for driving business growth by maintaining key relationships and developing sales activity across English-speaking markets.

He joined Leverage Shares from UniCredit, where he was a corporate relationship manager for multinationals. His previous experience is in corporate finance and fund administration at firms like IBM Bulgaria and DeGiro / FundShare.

Oktay holds a BA in Finance & Accounting and a post-graduate certificate in Entrepreneurship from Babson College. He is also a CFA charterholder.

Gold Retreats But Rally is Not Over