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For the Other Fangs, It’s Like Apple’s Warning Never Happened

While one charter member of the Fang bloc struggled, the rest did what they normally do lately: go up.

For the Other Fangs, It’s Like Apple’s Warning Never Happened
Logos Of FAANG Tech Companies. (Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- If the U.S. stock market is like a giant stone wall whose structural integrity depends entirely on the sturdiness of five tech megacaps, it didn’t act like it Tuesday.

While one charter member of the Fang bloc struggled, the rest did what they normally do lately: go up. Facebook Inc. and Netflix Inc. each rose at least 1.6%, while Amazon.com Inc. and Alphabet Inc. also ended the day with gains. In fact, an index comprising Amazon, Alphabet, Facebook and Netflix just posted its best session in three days. It’s as if Apple Inc.’s sales warning never happened.

The group of high-growth, high-multiple tech gaints remains something of a defensive play in a stock market that’s struggling to assess the long-term impact of the coronavirus outbreak. Investors are lured to multinational titans with ample liquidity, strong balance sheets and more generally an outsize influence on the broader market. That’s enough to offset investor concern about the impact of slowing growth in China on the firms’ balance sheets.

“Oddly, technology megacaps have become safe-haven plays,” said Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist for Prudential Financial Inc. “They are seen as companies that can absorb external shocks, and investors like their strong growth prospects and solid balance sheets.”

For the Other Fangs, It’s Like Apple’s Warning Never Happened

Apple sank 1.8% on Tuesday after warning that it doesn’t expect to meet its revenue guidance for the March quarter because of work slowdowns and lower smartphone demand following the coronavirus outbreak. The news pushed suppliers from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. in Asia to Dialog Semiconductor Plc in Europe into the red.

Companies like Facebook and Alphabet don’t rely as much on China for their profits. About 20% of Apple’s revenue in 2018 came from China. The broader Asia-Pacific region made up 17% of Facebook’s and 16% of Alphabet’s revenue during the same time.

Most of the tech megacaps have plenty of cash, adding to their defensive bearing. Apple is sitting on $207 billion, and Alphabet has about $120 billion. Valuations of tech megacaps remain a potential concern, but less so when looked at the rate of the firms’ earnings growth. Earnings yields for the top market-cap stocks in the S&P 500 are nearly double their 1990s counterparts, data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence show.

The combined Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Alphabet block has beaten the S&P 500 for 10 consecutive weeks, the longest winning streak since data going back to 2012 when the Fang Index was created.

They have “in essence become the safety stocks,” said Jeff Phlegar, chief executive officer at MacKay Shields LLC. “Certainly the price action when we’ve had things like the unfortunate coronavirus come about - the flight to quality” has largely been through those names.

--With assistance from Morwenna Coniam.

To contact the reporter on this story: Elena Popina in New York at epopina@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brad Olesen at bolesen3@bloomberg.net, Chris Nagi, Richard Richtmyer

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.