
Trading Day: Tech cools, Trump's Fed ire burns
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
The rally in U.S. tech stocks lost steam on Tuesday while bond yields and the dollar fell, as investors trimmed positions ahead of the first 'Big Tech' earnings reports and digested U.S. President Donald Trump's latest tirade against Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
More on that below. In my column today I look at the differences - and potentially worrying similarities - between today's AI frenzy and the dotcom boom and bust of 25 years ago. Is today's bubble bigger than it was back then?
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
Today's Key Market Moves
Tech cools, Trump's Fed ire burns
If investors cooled their stock-buying fervor on Tuesday, Trump showed no sign of relaxing the pressure he's heaping on Powell, branding the Fed chair a "numbskull" for not cutting interest rates.
Financial markets may be getting inured to the attacks by now, but one wonders if Powell will be prepared to face another 10 months of them until his term as Fed Chair expires. With Powell in blackout period ahead of next week's Fed decision, investors are unlikely to hear from him until next Wednesday when he holds his scheduled post-meeting press conference.
Powell has insisted he won't resign and that Trump does not have the legal authority to fire him, while the president doesn't appear to be in any mood to tone down his rhetoric against Powell or the Fed as an institution. The standoff is getting more tense.
So much so, former PIMCO CEO and co-CIO Mohamed El-Erian posted on X that Powell should resign "to safeguard the Fed's operational autonomy," a far from ideal scenario but preferable to the growing and broadening threats to Fed independence which will "undoubtedly increase should he remain in office."
Meanwhile, on trade, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he will meet his Chinese counterpart next week in Stockholm to discuss extending an August 12 deadline for a deal to avert sharply higher tariffs. Trump said he may take up President Xi Jinping on his offer to visit "in the not-too-distant future".
Washington announced a trade deal with the Philippines which will see imports from the South East Asian country slapped with 19% tariffs, while the U.S. will pay zero tariffs. Similar tariffs on imports from Indonesia were also announced. U.S.-Philippines and U.S.-Indonesia goods trade volumes last year were around $23.5 billion and $38.3 billion, respectively.
The latest U.S. corporate earnings were a mixed bag, with Coca-Cola reporting strong profits and demand, while General Motors' net income slumped by a third as tariff costs took a $1.1 billion bite from its bottom line.
Still, nearly 80% of the S&P 500 firms that have reported so far have beaten analyst expectations, according to LSEG data. Analysts' year-on-year aggregate earnings growth forecasts for the index now stand at 7.0%, up from 5.8% as of July 1.
Attention on Wednesday rests squarely on Alphabet and Tesla, the first of the megacap tech firms to report.
Is today's AI boom bigger than the dotcom bubble?
Wall Street's concentration in the red-hot tech sector is, by some measures, greater than it has ever been, eclipsing levels hit during the 1990s dotcom bubble. But does this mean history is bound to repeat itself?
The growing concentration in U.S. equities instantly brings to mind the internet and communications frenzy of the late 1990s. The tech-heavy Nasdaq peaked in March 2000 before cratering 65% over the following 12 months. And it didn't revisit its previous high for 14 years.
It seems unlikely that we'll see a repeat of this today, right? Maybe.
The market's reaction function appears to be different from what it was during the dotcom boom and bust. Just look at the current rebound from its post-'Liberation Day' tariff slump in early April – one of the fastest on record – or its rally during the pandemic.
But despite all of these differences, there are also some worrying parallels. Investors would do well to keep both in mind.
The most obvious similarity between these two periods is the concentration of tech and related industries in U.S. equity markets. The broad tech sector now accounts for 34% of the S&P 500's market cap, according to some data, exceeding the previous record of 33% set in March 2000.
Of the top 10 companies by market capitalization today, eight are tech or communications behemoths. They include the so-called 'Magnificent 7' – Apple (AAPL.O), opens new tab, Amazon (AMZN.O), opens new tab, Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab, Meta (META.O), opens new tab, Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab, Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab and Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab – as well as Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N), opens new tab and JPMorgan (JPM.N), opens new tab.
By contrast, only five of the 10 biggest companies in 1999 were tech firms. The other five were General Electric (GE.N), opens new tab, Citi, Exxon (XOM.N), opens new tab, Walmart (WMT.N), opens new tab, and Home Depot (HD.N), opens new tab.
On top of that, the top 10 companies' footprint in the S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab today is much larger than it was back then. The combined market cap of the top 10 today is almost $22 trillion, or 40% of the index's total, significantly higher than the comparable 25% in 1999.
This all reflects the fact that technology plays a much bigger role in the U.S. economy today than it did around the turn of the millennium.
By some measures, the current tech boom, driven in part by enthusiasm for artificial intelligence, is more extreme than the IT bubble of the late 1990s.
As Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, points out, the 12-month forward earnings valuation of today's top 10 stocks in the S&P 500 is higher than it was 25 years ago.
However, it's worth remembering that the dotcom bubble was characterized by a frenzy of public offerings and a raft of companies with shares valued at triple-digit multiples of future earnings. That's not the case today.
While the S&P tech sector is trading at 29.5 times forward earnings today, which is high by historical standards, this is nowhere near the peak of almost 50 times recorded in 2000. Similarly, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are currently trading around 22 and 28.5 times forward earnings, compared with the dotcom peaks of 24.5 and over 70 times, respectively.
With all that being said, a meaningful, prolonged market correction cannot be ruled out, especially if AI-driven growth isn't delivered as quickly as investors expect.
AI, the new driver of technological development, will require vast capital outlays, especially on data centers, which may mean that earnings and share price growth in tech could slow in the short run.
According to Morgan Stanley, the transformative potential of generative AI will require roughly $2.9 trillion of global data center spending through 2028, comprising $1.6 trillion on hardware like chips and servers and $1.3 trillion on infrastructure.
That means investment needs of over $900 billion in 2028, they reckon. For context, combined capital expenditure by all S&P 500 companies last year was around $950 billion.
Wall Street analysts are well aware of these figures, which suggests that at least some percentage of these huge sums should be factored into current share prices and expected earnings, but what if the benefits of AI take longer to deliver? Or what if an upstart (remember China's DeepSeek) dramatically shifts growth expectations for a major component of the index, like $4-trillion chipmaker Nvidia?
Of course, technology is so fundamental to today's society and economy that it's difficult to imagine its market footprint shrinking too much, for too long, as this raises the inevitable question of where investor capital would go. It's therefore reasonable to question whether a tech crash today would take well over a decade to recover from.
But, on the other hand, it's that type of thinking that has gotten investors into trouble before.
What could move markets tomorrow?
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, opens new tab, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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