Big Tech Goes From Stock Market’s Safest Bet to Biggest Question

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(Bloomberg) -- For most of the past decade, a handful of high-flying technology companies have pushed the US stock market to record highs and become cornerstones of investment portfolios. But that’s collapsed this year.

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Despite the S&P 500 Index clawing back into the green for 2025 after being whipsawed by President Donald Trump’s vacillating trade policies, tech giants like Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Tesla Inc. are still down. The Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Index — which includes those companies as well as Meta Platforms Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Nvidia Corp. — is underperforming the S&P 500, and if that holds through Dec. 31, it would make this just the second year in the last 10 where that’s happened.

It’s a far cry from last year, when technology and telecommunications stocks both rose more than 35% to lead the S&P 500’s 23% gain. This year, typically lagging groups like industrials, utilities and financials are driving the stock market’s rebound. Whether Big Tech can re-establish its historical dominance in 2025 is the existential question facing investors as they start positioning for the back half of the year.

“The market is starting to look back more at individual stocks and companies and financial strength and innovation rather than letting the uncertainty around tariffs and where they may go really dominate the conversation,” said Rick Gardner, chief investment officer at RGA Investments. “And if you want to start talking about the US economy and you want to start talking about technology, that’s a really bright story.”

Gardner has been buying Big Tech stocks for his clients over the past month as the market has rebounded but they’ve languished.

He’s not alone. Signs are emerging that professional traders are increasingly wading back in after slashing equity positioning amid the economic uncertainty triggered by Trump’s global trade war. For example, hedge funds on Tuesday snapped up US equities at the fastest pace since April 9, the day the S&P 500 soared 9.5% after Trump announced his tariff reprieve, according to Goldman Sachs’ prime brokerage desk. Technology stocks were the biggest beneficiaries of the buying.

Not A Good Setup

The flipside of this optimism is the reality that tech stocks have had a massive runup over the past few years, and with the economy in flux the risk is these shares could have much more room to fall. Betting on Big Tech a decade ago resulted in a gain of 2,179%, compared with 181% for the S&P 500, excluding dividends.