History Says the Nasdaq Could Keep Soaring in 2024: 1 "Magnificent Seven" Stock to Buy Hand Over Fist Before It Proves Doubters Wrong

In This Article:

Technology stocks soared impressively in 2023 as they found favor with investors once again thanks to promising economic indicators like falling inflation, the Federal Reserve's decision to pause interest rate hikes, and the impressive growth reported by several tech companies thanks to new tech trends such as artificial intelligence (AI).

These factors go some way to explaining why the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector index rose nearly 54% last year. Historical trends show that the year in which the Nasdaq-100 delivered 40%-plus gains is nearly always followed by another solid growth year (1999 was an exception as it preceded the dot-com bubble).

Brokerage firm Capex.com estimates that the Nasdaq-100 will deliver a gain of 24% in 2024. That seems like good news for a group of seven megacap tech companies known as the "Magnificent Seven," which played an important role in the Nasdaq's surge last year.

The Magnificent Seven group consists of Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Amazon, Alphabet, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla. One of these companies, however, has been at the receiving end of downgrades from Wall Street in 2024.

Apple got off to a disappointing start in 2024 following robust gains last year, with the stock being hit by a couple of downgrades recently. Let's see why that has been the case.

Analysts are concerned about weak iPhone demand

Barclays analyst Tim Long downgraded Apple stock to underweight last week, pointing out that the demand for the company's latest generation iPhone 15 models has been tepid, especially in China. At the same time, Long claims that the company's high-margin services business could witness a slowdown in growth.

The Barclays downgrade was followed by another one from Harsh Kumar of investment banking firm Piper Sandler. Kumar downgraded Apple stock from overweight to neutral, and his thesis was similar to Long's. The Piper Sandler analyst said he believes that the unit growth of Apple's iPhone sales has peaked already.

Meanwhile, a report from Apple's contract manufacturing partner Foxconn hasn't helped matters either. The Taiwan-based company, which assembles iPhones for Apple, reported a sharp decline of 27% in sales for December 2023. Foxconn sees its revenue declining in the current quarter as well. Given that the iPhone is Apple's biggest product line (it produced 52% of its total revenue in fiscal 2023, ended in September 2023), these reports don't bode well for the tech giant's performance in the new year.

For instance, Counterpoint Research expects iPhone sales volume to increase by just 2% this year, below the 5% growth that the overall smartphone market is expected to clock in 2024. All this paints a gloomy picture of Apple's future. However, there is a major catalyst that could help Apple spring a surprise and prove the doubters wrong.