What History Says About the Tech Downturn

Positive signs fighting the pandemic … and for reopening the economy … tech takes a beating in a market rotation … but history instructs to stay the course

There is a growing light at the end of the tunnel.

According to The Washington Post, 54 million Americans have received some version of the COVID vaccine.

And earlier this week, President Biden said we will have enough vaccine by the end of May so that every American who wants to be vaccinated, can be.

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It feels like we’re entering a new phase in this pandemic.

And if you doubt that Americans are getting more back to “normal” a Bloomberg headline from Wednesday may convince you.

The story notes that, according to Google Community Mobility Reports data, in the last week of February, the average number of visits to U.S. workplaces hit its highest level since March 20 of last year.

On Friday morning, the U.S. Department of Labor reported that nonfarm payrolls jumped 379,000 for the month, and the unemployment rate fell to 6.2%.

So, things are starting to look up.

But let’s not get too far ahead of ourselves. For investors, not everything has turned rosy.

Before the positive jobs report, markets were headed for the third straight week of losses. We’re seeing a rotation from growth stocks to value stocks as companies that took a beating from the pandemic slowly start to recover. Plus, the recent rise in the 10-year Treasury yields has only contributed to the rotation that started about a month ago.

And what feels especially disconcerting is that the leaders of the recent decline have been the market darlings for the past year – tech stocks.

But history teaches us a lot about why tech investors shouldn’t panic as we enter this new phase of COVID recovery.

***“Those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it…”

That’s how Luke Lango began his monthly issue of Innovation Investor that came out on Thursday. Regular Digest readers will recall that Luke is a hypergrowth investing expert – and that usually means investing in the companies pioneering the latest tech innovations.

What lessons from history is Luke referring to, exactly?

Let’s rewind to a year ago – March 2020.

The Covid-19 virus had broken out of China and was spreading rapidly across the globe. As a result, the world economy shut down, stocks fell off a cliff, and hypergrowth stocks were hit particularly hard. Lots of investors threw in the towel on some of the most innovative companies in the world, like Square (SQ) and Pinterest (PINS).

Square stock dropped more than 60% in March 2020. Pinterest stock shed 60%, too.