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Ticking Time Bombs: 7 S&P 500 Stocks to Dump Before the Damage Is Done

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It’s been a tough month for S&P 500 stocks. September slumps are common, and this month is historically the worst for the index. But new factors are emerging that could keep this month’s losing streak going. 

Inflation looks stickier than expected. The Federal Reserve just said interest rates will stay higher for longer. Consumer confidence is falling. Investors are panicking. I spent a ton of time browsing X this weekend, reading retail and institutional trader reactions to last week’s bloodbath. And, honestly, a lot of the analysis was a bit too panicky, eschewing historical perspective for a Chicken Little-style “the sky is falling” screed. 

I’m still bullish on the S&P 500’s long-term prospects. Still, the rest of 2023 remains up in the air. If you’re panicky about stocks short-term, you may want to sell these S&P 500 stocks before it’s too late. 

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S&P 500 Stocks: Nvidia (NVDA)

Nvidia corporation (NVDA) logo displayed on smartphone with stock market chart background. Nvidia is a global leader in artificial intelligence hardware.
Nvidia corporation (NVDA) logo displayed on smartphone with stock market chart background. Nvidia is a global leader in artificial intelligence hardware.

Source: Evolf / Shutterstock.com

Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) is a tough stock to bet against, but with today’s bearish sentiment groundswell, it’s also one of the stocks primed to reverse course (if just temporarily). Shares have already pulled back the past three weeks, marking a 15% decline. But if market-wide bearish sentiment holds, Nvidia could easily dip into the mid-$300s.

Even tech perma-bull Cathie Wood is selling Nvidia in spades. She trimmed almost 42,000 NVDA shares from her ARK Genomic Revolution ETF (BATS:ARKG) in the past month, locking in a substantial gain but serving as a harbinger of trouble for the S&P 500 monolith.

Ultimately, nothing really or substantially changed for this “Magnificent 7” S&P 500 stock. But we’re in an era where rates will remain higher for longer. That leads to investors increasingly cycling away from high-flying tech and into safer, fixed-income-focused investment strategies. In that world, stocks like Nividia and its 100x price-to-earnings ratio are primed to fall as those traders take profit and wait out the coming storm.

Adobe (ADBE)

A white and blue building with the Adobe logo is pictured in front of a blue sky
A white and blue building with the Adobe logo is pictured in front of a blue sky

Source: JHVEPhoto / Shutterstock

Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE) transitioned largely to a software-as-a-service (SaaS) model in recent years. Instead of lifetime software licensing, Adobe mostly focuses on recurring subscriptions. The move paid off, as Adobe’s Creative Cloud subscriptions ballooned throughout 2022, making up more than half the firm’s revenue that year. However, shifting winds and consumer trends present a problem for that business model. 

Consumers face tighter household budgets, so they’re liable to cut expenses wherever they can. And, while a monthly payment for an occasional-use product like Adobe’s Photoshop or other software might be fine in strong economic times, it’s often the first to go in a constrained economy. Likewise, a glut of free options exist today that serve many of the same functions as Adobe’s product suite, creating less brand loyalty as the switching cost is fairly low.