Latest Insider Selling: 10 Large-Cap Tech Stocks to Watch

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In this article, we will take a detailed look at Latest Insider Selling: 10 Large-Cap Tech Stocks to Watch. For a quick overview of the 5 such stocks, read our article Latest Insider Selling: 5 Large-Cap Tech Stocks to Watch.

Large-cap technology stocks have been the biggest beneficiaries of the AI revolution that apparently has no end in sight as companies continue to develop innovative AI solutions.

However, some analysts believe large-cap tech stock valuations have gone too far and need a breather. They urge investors to look beyond large-cap tech stocks and focus on pick-and-shovel AI plays that will play a key role in the development, deployment and usage of generative AI applications. And these companies are seeing a rapid rise in investor sentiment over the past few months. State Street Global Advisors said in a report in January that its SPDR NYSE Technology ETF(XNTK), which includes 35 US stocks, had outperformed the S&P 500 Tech sector and the S&P 500 Index by 6% and 9% since June. So far this year, the ETF has gained about 14.2%, better than the S&P 500’s gain of about 10.6%. The report said that earnings estimates of XNTK’s benchmark have been upgraded by 10% since June.

BlackRock in its latest market commentary released March 25 said that it remains Overweight US stocks, especially AI-related stocks, because it believes the overall market backdrop remains positive despite high valuations of some technology stocks. BlackRock cited Bloomberg data which says that tech companies were expected to account for almost half of the total S&P 500 earnings this year.

BlackRock also rejected the notion that the current tech stocks rally is similar to the dot com bubble.

“To compare the periods, BlackRock’s systematic equities team analyzed 400 metrics related to valuations and other features and found that the number flashing red now is 50% lower than when the dot-com bubble burst in 2000.”

However, BlackRock listed some scenarios that could change its market thesis. It believes if inflation remains subdued in the short term but rebounds later, the Fed could settle for a higher for longer scenario in which interest rates would stay elevated.

“Persistent inflation pressures from mega forces, or big structural shifts we see driving returns, also call for a higher neutral rate – the interest rate that neither stokes nor limits economic activity – than in the past. We think the Fed’s nudgedup long-run policy forecasts are starting to reflect our view of rates staying higher for longer than pre-pandemic. Markets are not eyeing that outlook for now. Second, stocks could grow more sensitive to macro news as profit margin pressures mount.”