Why investors should stop fixating on Apple and Tesla stock in 2023: Morning Brief – Yahoo Finance

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This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe
Thursday, January 5, 2023
Today's newsletter is by Jared Blikre, a reporter focused on the markets on Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter @SPYJared. Read this and more market news on the go with Yahoo Finance App.
Two trading days into the new year, and 2023 is already off to a rocky start for Apple (AAPL) and Tesla (TSLA), arguably the two most important stocks for U.S. investors.
While both stocks managed to finish with gains on Wednesday, they remain underwater in the new year after each hit new 52-week lows on the first trading day of 2023.
Tesla's 12% drop on Tuesday was its worst one-day performance since 2020. Apple's decline to start the year saw the iPhone maker lose its status as the last U.S. tech giant with a market cap above $2 trillion.
And as a bevy of new leaders are surfacing in the S&P 500 index, history suggests these two stocks aren't likely to retain their top-of-mind status for investors in the coming years.
Over the last three months, some of the biggest companies by market capitalization have seen shares hit hardest, with Tesla leading the pack, losing 55%.
Over that time, Amazon (AMZN) is down nearly 30%, while Apple and Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) are each down about 13%.
Contrast that with the performance of some key names in the health care, financial, and consumer staples sectors over the trailing quarter, and we can see the changing of the guard unfolding in real-time.
Pharmaceutical company Merck (MRK) is up over 25% over the last three months, while big bank JPMorgan Chase (JPM) is up 20%, and consumer staple Procter & Gamble (PG) is up over 15%.
Historically, market leaders don't span multiple bull markets and decades.
The top five stocks at the height of the dot-com bubble in 2000 were Microsoft, Cisco (CSCO), General Electric (GE), Exxon Mobil (XOM), and Intel (INTC).
According to research by Goldman Sachs, these names comprised 18% of the S&P 500's market value at the time. Today, they make up only 8%.
Compare those names to the leaders at the beginning of 2022, which is increasingly seen as the end of the low-interest rate era that persisted for over a decade.
These leaders were Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), and what is now Meta Platforms (META).
This group achieved an eye-watering 25% concentration in the S&P 500 around the start of the pandemic — a share that's already shrunk to 18% today.
Only Microsoft spans both eras, though even that's a bit misleading, as the stock fell from the ranks of the market's largest names after the tech bubble burst, only to later re-emerge under Satya Nadella's leadership in the late 2010s.
Exxon Mobil is another interesting case.
The company ceded its crown as the biggest U.S. public company in 2013 to Apple. Shares were later decimated by two oil crashes, first in 2014 and then in 2020. However, as crude oil has surged over the last two years, so have energy stocks. Now, Exxon is once again in the top ten list, sitting in eighth place.
The remaining companies from the top five in 2000 — Cisco, Intel, and GE — are still well below their record highs notched over two decades ago. GE, for its part, is stuck 85% below its 2000 record high; on Wednesday, its healthcare unit began life as a separate publicly-traded company.
Of course, the future isn't pre-ordained in any market environment, and investors will look to price in a host of game-changing unknowns this year.
Key to these unknowns will be a debate over whether or not the bear market bottom is in, and when the Federal Reserve will eventually pivot.
Regardless, investors will likely be served best in the new year — and new era — by keeping an open mind rather than fixating on yesterday's broken leaders.
Even if those broken leaders are household stocks like Apple and Tesla.
Economy
7:30 a.m. ET: Challenger Job Cuts, year-over-year, December (416.5% during prior month)
8:15 a.m. ET: ADP Employment Change, December (150,000 expected, 127,000 during
prior month)
8:30 a.m. ET: Trade Balance, November (-$63.1 billion expected, -$78.2 billion during prior month)
8:30 a.m. ET: Initial Jobless Claims, week ended Dec. 31 (225,000 expected, 225,000 during prior week)
8:30 a.m. ET: Continuing Claims, week ended Dec. 24 (1.727 million during prior week)
8:30 a.m. ET: S&P Global U.S. Services PMI, December Final (44.4 expected, 44.4 during prior month)
8:30 a.m. ET: S&P Global U.S. Composite PMI, December Final (44.6 during prior month)
Earnings
AngioDynamics (ANGO), Conagra (CAG), Constellation Brands (STZ), Helen of Troy (HELE), Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA)
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Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) shares dropped another 5% Thursday morning as more news from the fourth quarter came out. Tesla stock has now dropped more than 70% over the last 12 months and is at its lowest level since August 2020. As of 11:05 a.m. ET, shares were hovering near the morning lows, down 4.9%.
Early-stage companies like Rivian Automotive (NASDAQ: RIVN), Lucid Group (NASDAQ: LCID), and Canoo (NASDAQ: GOEV) took some of the biggest hits, dropping by between about 5% and 8% at their lows of the morning. As of 1 p.m. ET, those three stocks were lower by 6.1%, 3.4%, and 6.9%, respectively. As fourth-quarter EV delivery data has begun trickling out this week, investors are growing more and more concerned about the pace of expected growth in the industry.
Tesla (TSLA) shares have been on the end of a severe beating in recent times, with the latest meltdown taking place after the EV leader missed delivery estimates for Q4. That has only exacerbated a stock that already badly impacted by CEO Elon Musk’s ongoing Twitter shenanigans. However, according to Morgan Stanley’s Adam Jonas, the stock’s awful showing – down by 42% over the past month – is “driven by EV supply > EV demand for the first time since Covid, exacerbated by technical factors.” Jona
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Although last year was challenging for most of Wall Street, it was an especially difficult year for growth stocks. When the curtain closed on 2022, both the growth-dependent Nasdaq Composite and the Nasdaq 100 — an index comprised of the 100 largest nonfinancial companies listed on the Nasdaq exchange — lost 33% of their value. The thumping that Nasdaq 100 stocks took last year can be a blessing in disguise for opportunistic growth seekers looking to pounce.
Red-hot inflation threw a wrench into the gears of the global economy last year, causing the S&P 500 to nosedive into a bear market. For instance, Shopify (NYSE: SHOP) and Cloudflare (NYSE: NET) saw their share prices plunge 79% and 80%, respectively, from all-time highs and both stocks currently trade at sizable discounts to their historical valuations. Shopify makes omnichannel commerce easy.

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