The stock market is experiencing a significant 'mega rotation,' with investors shifting capital away from lagging mega-cap technology stocks and into cyclical and value sectors. This trend is being driven by a combination of factors, including fatigue with some investment themes and the impact of an AI-induced memory shortage.
Analysts note that while specific events like Micron's strong earnings provided temporary boosts to tech, the broader sector's inability to sustain gains suggests that market breadth is becoming more important than momentum in a few key names. Rob Haworth, senior investment strategy director at US Bank Asset Management, highlighted that rotation remains a critical narrative for equity markets.
David Morrison, senior market analyst at Trade Nation, pointed out the resilience of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has hit intraday records while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite have struggled. This suggests investors are still keen to be invested in equities but are rotating out of potentially overheated semiconductor stocks into overlooked sectors offering better value.
The 'Magnificent Seven'—Nvidia, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, Apple, and Tesla—have been among the weakest performers recently. Microsoft and Apple stocks, for instance, saw declines attributed partly to price hikes on devices driven by higher memory costs, a key commodity impacting hyperscalers and technology hardware companies. Despite these challenges for some large tech firms, overall investor sentiment remains solid.
As tech, the year-to-date top-performing sector, shows weakness, other sectors are benefiting. Haworth noted that lower energy costs and long-term interest rates are lifting segments like small companies, healthcare, and industrials. The outperformance of the equal-weight S&P 500 index compared to the benchmark index further supports the idea that investors are rotating into value and defensive stocks.