Tech tumbles ahead of crucial week for quarterly results
Alphabet and Microsoft both lost more than 1 per cent, while Apple tumbled 4 per cent
SAN FRANCISCO:
US technology stocks tumbled on Friday ahead of a crucial week of quarterly reports from Alphabet, Facebook and other heavyweights as investors worried that the high-performance sector may be running out of fuel.
Google-parent Alphabet and Microsoft both lost more than 1 per cent, while Apple tumbled 4 per cent because of worries about slower-than-expected iPhone demand.
When Alphabet and Facebook report next week, investors will be anxious for new details about how they may be affected by calls for increased government regulation following reports on March 17 that Facebook improperly shared personal information about its users with political consultancy Cambridge Analytica.
Tech companies aim for easy access over brawny security at offices
A European law taking effect in May will allow European regulators to fine companies for collecting or using personal data without users’ consent, affecting Alphabet, Facebook and other major technology firms.
Shares of Facebook, Amazon.com, Apple, Netflix and Alphabet - which in recent years propelled Wall Street’s gains - in recent months have splintered in different directions.
Amazon.com has rallied 31 per cent in 2018, while Netflix has soared 73 per cent. Portfolio mainstays Facebook and Apple, meanwhile, are both down year to date, while Alphabet’s 2.4 per cent return is only a little higher than the S&P 500’s flat performance.
“Investor sentiment with tech stocks is in a long, slow retreat,” said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “If guidance is significantly more optimistic than what was expected, they might get a pop on that, but anything negative will be disastrous.”
Hurting Apple, Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty in a note to clients cut her estimates for iPhone shipments in the March and June quarters due to weakness in China. Huberty trimmed her Apple price target to $200 from $203, compared with Friday’s $166 level.
Analysts on average expect S&P 500 information technology companies to grow their earnings per share by nearly 24 per cent, which is better than the 20 per cent growth estimated across the S&P 500, according to Reuters.
But the high bar suggests that failure to deliver on those expectations may exacerbate recent market worries about high valuations, damage from a trade war with China and expectations the US Federal Reserve will continue to raise interest rates.
The S&P 500 information technology index is trading at about 18 times expected earnings, down from nearly 20 in late January but still above its 15-year average of 17, according to Reuters Datastream.
After the bell on Monday, Alphabet is expected by analysts on average to report a 22 per cent increase in revenue to $30.3 billion, with net income rising 21 per cent, equivalent to $9.28 per share on a non-GAAP basis, according to Reuters data.
Tech dream still alive at TED gathering despite Facebook debacle
Analysts expect Facebook to post a 42 per cent surge in quarterly revenue, to $11.4 billion, when it reports late on Wednesday. Its stock has lost 10 per cent since the revelations about Cambridge, underscoring investors’ concerns about regulation that could crimp the leading social network’s profitability.
Amazon late on Thursday is expected to report a 40 per cent jump in revenue to $50 billion as the online retailer continues its expansion into cloud computing and brick-and-mortar groceries. Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos may face questions from analysts about how Amazon might react to US President Donald Trump’s allegations that the company enjoys unfair business advantages, including its use of United States Postal Service.
Also reporting next week are Twitter and Qualcomm on Wednesday, and Intel and Microsoft on Thursday.
US technology stocks tumbled on Friday ahead of a crucial week of quarterly reports from Alphabet, Facebook and other heavyweights as investors worried that the high-performance sector may be running out of fuel.
Google-parent Alphabet and Microsoft both lost more than 1 per cent, while Apple tumbled 4 per cent because of worries about slower-than-expected iPhone demand.
When Alphabet and Facebook report next week, investors will be anxious for new details about how they may be affected by calls for increased government regulation following reports on March 17 that Facebook improperly shared personal information about its users with political consultancy Cambridge Analytica.
Tech companies aim for easy access over brawny security at offices
A European law taking effect in May will allow European regulators to fine companies for collecting or using personal data without users’ consent, affecting Alphabet, Facebook and other major technology firms.
Shares of Facebook, Amazon.com, Apple, Netflix and Alphabet - which in recent years propelled Wall Street’s gains - in recent months have splintered in different directions.
Amazon.com has rallied 31 per cent in 2018, while Netflix has soared 73 per cent. Portfolio mainstays Facebook and Apple, meanwhile, are both down year to date, while Alphabet’s 2.4 per cent return is only a little higher than the S&P 500’s flat performance.
“Investor sentiment with tech stocks is in a long, slow retreat,” said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “If guidance is significantly more optimistic than what was expected, they might get a pop on that, but anything negative will be disastrous.”
Hurting Apple, Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty in a note to clients cut her estimates for iPhone shipments in the March and June quarters due to weakness in China. Huberty trimmed her Apple price target to $200 from $203, compared with Friday’s $166 level.
Analysts on average expect S&P 500 information technology companies to grow their earnings per share by nearly 24 per cent, which is better than the 20 per cent growth estimated across the S&P 500, according to Reuters.
But the high bar suggests that failure to deliver on those expectations may exacerbate recent market worries about high valuations, damage from a trade war with China and expectations the US Federal Reserve will continue to raise interest rates.
The S&P 500 information technology index is trading at about 18 times expected earnings, down from nearly 20 in late January but still above its 15-year average of 17, according to Reuters Datastream.
After the bell on Monday, Alphabet is expected by analysts on average to report a 22 per cent increase in revenue to $30.3 billion, with net income rising 21 per cent, equivalent to $9.28 per share on a non-GAAP basis, according to Reuters data.
Tech dream still alive at TED gathering despite Facebook debacle
Analysts expect Facebook to post a 42 per cent surge in quarterly revenue, to $11.4 billion, when it reports late on Wednesday. Its stock has lost 10 per cent since the revelations about Cambridge, underscoring investors’ concerns about regulation that could crimp the leading social network’s profitability.
Amazon late on Thursday is expected to report a 40 per cent jump in revenue to $50 billion as the online retailer continues its expansion into cloud computing and brick-and-mortar groceries. Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos may face questions from analysts about how Amazon might react to US President Donald Trump’s allegations that the company enjoys unfair business advantages, including its use of United States Postal Service.
Also reporting next week are Twitter and Qualcomm on Wednesday, and Intel and Microsoft on Thursday.