Netflix’s report to test tech rally

The sector’s aggregate value now exceeds $4.4 trillion

April 15, 2017 07:34 pm | Updated 07:45 pm IST - SAN FRANCISCO

 Reaction to Netflix news will be key.

Reaction to Netflix news will be key.

The longevity of the technology stocks rally is on the line as Netflix Inc. kicks off the earnings season for a sector that has mushroomed to account for more than a fifth of the U.S. stock market’s value.

Surges in Apple, Facebook and other Silicon Valley heavyweights have pushed the S&P 500 technology index 10% higher this year, more than double the broader S&P 500 index’s 4% gain. The tech sector’s aggregate value now tops $4.4 trillion, 30% higher than No. 2 financials, and even rivals the size of the Federal Reserve’s massive balance sheet.

Profit growth

The next test for these companies is whether their profit growth is sufficient to justify their outsized share price gains.

Enter Netflix, which reports after the bell on Monday. The video streaming pioneer is expected by analysts to quintuple its earnings per share. But with its stock surging 43% in the past six months and now trading at 109 times expected earnings, Netflix’s valuation is based more on sentiment than on fundamentals, investors opine.

“The market’s reaction to whatever the news is from Netflix will be telling,” said Stephen Massocca, Senior Vice President at Wedbush Securities in San Francisco. “If the slightest little negative leads to a 15-point decline, that tells you things are elevated and the market is only going to reward the most excellent of news.” Momentum in many tech stocks has been driven by ambitious expectations for earnings. Tech profits are seen climbing 14.7% for the first quarter, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. That would account for nearly a third of the 10.4% earnings growth predicted across the S&P 500. “It’s great for everybody to feel good, but if nobody is buying stuff and the companies are reporting disappointing sales and that affects their margins, then you’ll be starting to say, wait a second,” said Thomas Martin, a portfolio manager at GLOBALT Investments.

Along with the S&P 500, tech shares have flatlined for weeks as Wall Street reassesses whether President Donald Trump will be able to push corporate tax cuts through Congress. Still, so far in April investors have poured $122 million into the U.S.-listed Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund, bringing total flows into the fund this year to $1.4 billion, according to ETF.com.

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