Investors have called their five-year love affair with technology stocks into question over the last 35 days. For this reason, we at Smead Capital Management are calling in John Lennon and Paul McCartney’s beautiful ballad “If I Fell” to help answer the following questions. Should investors continue to fall in love with these glamour growth titans? How have past love affairs with tech ended? Where might the bottom be over the next five years if history is any guide? Lastly, how will agnostic index and ETF investors react if the stocks that made their wealth grow the last five years become a source of financial heartache?

If I fell in love with you
Would you promise to be true
And help me understand
‘Cause I’ve been in love before
And I found that love was more
Than just holding hands

(Lyrics source: The Beatles “If I Fell”)

In the fall of 2018, technology companies grew to 30 percent of the S&P 500 Index, when Amazon (AMZN) and Netflix (NFLX) were included. This tied the peak reached at the end of 1999. To say that investors “fell in love” with these stocks would be a severe understatement. Will they “promise to be true” and help investors reach their financial goals? Have these companies helped investors “understand” why they may reward them in the future?

These are important questions to answer, “’cause investors have been in love with tech before” and they found on the downside that “love was more” than “just holding hands.” Today their hands are held by Vanguard, State Street, Charles Schwab and BlackRock, the largest owners of tech-concentrated vehicles. The growth versus value chart below shows the “love before” and how that played out:

It took four years to create a historical extreme in early 2000 and two years to completely crush those who had their hands held on the way down. Doesn’t building the peak in 10 years mean “the pain” will be handed out for five or six years this time?

If I give my heart to you
I must be sure
From the very start
That you would love me more than her
If I trust in you oh please
Don’t run and hide
If I love you too oh please
Don’t hurt my pride like her
‘Cause I couldn’t stand the pain
And I would be sad if our new love was in vain

On November 1, 2018, Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple (AAPL), joined the other FAANG companies by announcing they will “run and hide” about phone sales. Phone sales have been the bread and butter of the massive gain in Apple’s stock the last 10 years. This is mild “hiding” compare to Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX) and Alphabet (GOOGL). They hide on privacy, disclosure, accounting, anti-trust issues, and in many cases have used “free” giveaways (free social media, free delivery, free search) to distort our economy and amass the most power this side of Standard Oil/John D. Rockefeller in 1900.

If this market route turns into a debacle like 2000-2003 it will “hurt investor pride like her.” We believe investors in tech-heavy funds, ETFs and indexes won’t be able to “stand the pain” and will flee in a multi-year negative-tech feedback loop. Their “love” will have been “in vain.”

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