NEW YORK, July 5 (Reuters) - Hopes that the U.S. stocks
rally will broaden beyond megacaps like Nvidia ( NVDA ) will be
tested in coming weeks as investors learn whether profit growth
from other companies is starting to catch up with that of the
tech-related leaders.
The S&P 500 has rallied 16% so far in 2024, driven by
a handful of massive stocks poised to benefit from emerging
artificial intelligence technology. Only 24% of stocks in the
S&P 500 outperformed the index in the first half, the
third-narrowest six-month period since 1986, according to BofA
Global Research strategists.
Meanwhile, the equal-weight S&P 500 -- a proxy for
the average stock -- is only up around 4% this year. As of
Tuesday, about 40% of S&P 500 components were down for the year.
Second-quarter earnings kick off next week with major
banks including JPMorgan ( JPM ) and Citigroup ( C/PN ) reporting
on July 12. Investors will be watching whether profits from
other companies are catching up with the "Magnificent 7":
Nvidia ( NVDA ), Microsoft ( MSFT ), Apple ( AAPL ), Alphabet,
Amazon ( AMZN ), Meta Platforms ( META ) and Tesla,
many of which rebounded from struggles in 2022.
Investors generally view a narrow rally as more fragile,
because weakness in just a few big stocks could sink indexes,
but some hope gains will spread during the second half.
More companies are projected to post improved earnings as
many investors expect the economy to navigate a soft landing,
which could boost stocks trading at more moderate valuations
than market leaders.
"If we're looking for a catalyst to have broader
participation in this rally this year, the second-quarter
earnings reporting season may well be the start of that," said
Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth.
The S&P 500 is trading at about 21 times forward
earnings estimates, but if the top 10 stocks by market value are
excluded that figure drops to 16.5 on average for the rest of
the index, Hogan said.
In a further sign of the narrow rally, the information
technology and communication services
sectors, which include most of the Magnificent 7, are the only
two of 11 S&P 500 sectors to outperform the broader index this
year.
Earnings among the Magnificent 7 rose 51.8% year-on-year in
the first quarter compared to 1.3% earnings growth for the rest
of the S&P 500, according to Tajinder Dhillon, senior research
analyst at LSEG.
That gap is expected to shrink, with forecasts for
Magnificent 7 year-on-year earnings rising 29.7% in the second
quarter and earnings among the rest of the index up 7.2%,
according to LSEG.
"We think greater balance in profitability could lead to
broader market participation in the coming quarters," Chris
Haverland, global equity strategist with the Wells Fargo
Investment Institute (WFII), said in a note on Tuesday.
The WFII suggests investors trim gains in the technology and
communication services sectors to take advantage of weakness in
energy, healthcare, industrials and materials.
Later in the year, the Magnificent 7's profit advantage is
expected to diminish further. The group's year-on-year earnings
growth is expected to be 17.4% in the third quarter and 18.3% in
the fourth. That compares with rest-of-index earnings growth of
6.8% in the third quarter and 13.9% in the fourth.
"We anticipate that we're going to have nearly all sectors
of the S&P participating in earnings growth in 2024," said Katie
Nixon, chief investment officer for Northern Trust Wealth
Management.
Not everyone is convinced that other groups are poised to
catch up, as AI remains a dominant theme. Robert Pavlik, senior
portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth Management, said he had
doubts about earnings growth meeting expectations, due to weak
consumer spending, sticky inflation and other concerning
economic indicators.
Still, in coming days, investors could get a clearer view of
the economy's health and when the Federal Reserve will start
cutting interest rates, which could also trigger broader market
gains. Fed Chair Jerome Powell is due to testify before Congress
on Tuesday, while Thursday's release of the monthly consumer
price index provides a crucial look at inflation.