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Tech shares are ‘one unhealthy payroll away’ from dropping dominance: BofA

The rally in the biggest US technology stocks is at risk of fading further if the US economy continues to cool, according to Bank of America Corp.’s Michael Hartnett.

The strategist — who is bullish on bonds for the second half of 2024 — has said signs of an economic slowdown would fuel a rotation into stocks that have lagged behind the pricey tech mega-caps this year.

In a note on Friday, Hartnett said recent data suggested the global economy was “ill,” and that “we are one bad payroll away” from big tech stocks losing their dominance. 

The upward trajectory of technology stocks including Apple Inc., Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc., Microsoft Corp., Nvidia Corp. and Meta Platforms Inc. has been derailed in the past two weeks as investors flocked into small caps on bets that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting rates soon.

About $2.6 trillion has been erased from the market capitalization of firms in the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index since it hit a record on July 10, also fueled by worries that big investments in artificial intelligence may not pay off any time soon.

Still, BofA’s Hartnett said equity bulls were holding on to the belief that a correction was “healthy” as the market hadn’t fallen below critical levels. The Nasdaq 100 has dropped about 9% since July 10, but it’s still up more than 30% since hitting a low in October 2023. US equity futures advanced on Friday, putting them on track to recoup some losses.

The bank’s custom bull-and-bear indicator edged up to 6.9 in the week through July 24 to the highest in over three years. A reading above 8 would flash a contrarian sell signal — which could be triggered if fund managers’ equity allocations rise and cash levels decline further, and a rally in the laggards leads to an improvement in market breadth, Hartnett said.

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