Performance After Peak Valuation: Navigating the Tech Sector’s High Multiples

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By Jeremy Schwartz, CFA
Global Chief Investment Officer
Follow Jeremy Schwartz @JeremyDSchwartz

Recently, tech stocks have been soaring, stirring up a mix of excitement and anxiety. As questions swirl about whether the outperformance can be sustained, much like how growth beat value for much of the last 15 years, there’s also a fear that this artificial intelligence (AI) boom may begin to rhyme with the internet explosion and subsequent bust of the 2000–2002 period.

Today, gains in the sector are concentrated in large companies like Nvidia and Meta, with year-to-date (YTD) returns standing at 200.71% and 144.52%, respectively. As a result, the Nasdaq 100 has outperformed the S&P 500 by around 23% YTD,1 mostly due to its extra weighting in the Information Technology sector (~60% vs. ~27%).2

This rally has been accompanied by a significant expansion in valuation multiples, specifically the price-to-sales (P/S) ratio. Particularly relevant for the Tech sector, the P/S ratio offers a way to evaluate companies that may not yet be profitable but that are generating sales—a common scenario among new and innovative firms. For many in the Tech sector today, this ratio has soared to unprecedented levels.

Figure 1: A Long Time Series Shows Three Distinct Peaks in Tech Stocks’ Price-to-Sales Ratios

Figure 1_A Long Time Series of PtoS
Figure 1_A Long Time Series of PtoS

At the end of March 2023, Nvidia became the company with the highest P/S ratio in both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indexes. It has only increased since then, reaching a P/S ratio of over 40, based on the trailing-12 months of sales. Nvidia’s quarterly earnings report, however, did forecast a large (60%) jump in future sales, so analysts are now pricing in future sales, which brings down the multiple to 25 times expected sales over the next 12 months.3

This leads us to our key question: based on an historical sample of companies that reached these valuations in the past, what are the chances Nvidia can continue to outperform?

P/S Ratios: From Rarity to Normality

From the late 1960s to the early 1990s, high P/S ratios were rare. It was uncommon to find a company with a P/S ratio over 25. On the rare occasions it did happen, it was usually just one or two firms each year, and the percentage of the total market cap they represented was negligible.

Fast forward to today, and high P/S ratios have become almost routine, especially in the Tech sector, and it begs the question as to whether this is the new normal.