When Investors Are Driven by Irrational Fear, Runups and Selloffs Are Two Sides of the Same Coin

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Itโ€™s been a difficult two weeks for tech stocks. Despite outward appearances, however, the tech economy is strong, and still growing. But sometimes, markets respond irrationally, and smooth roads suddenly turn bumpy. In this instance, rising interest rates have ignited a selloff.

Runups and selloffs are often fueled by fear. Whether that fear is rational or irrational is immaterial. All thatโ€™s needed is a spark.

โ€œIn 2020, tech stock valuations were driven by FOMO โ€“ fear of missing out. Aggressive investors ignored signs of valuation excess, bidding up stocks with high revenue growth โ€ฆ The GAAP strategyโ€”growth at any price โ€“ resulted in expensive stocks, but FOMO kept them rallying,โ€ writes Eric J. Savitz in Barronโ€™s. โ€œBut that was then. Ted Mortonson, technology strategist at investment bank Baird, thinks the new tech dynamic is FOGKโ€”fear of getting killed.โ€

Ericโ€™s article quotes analysts who see dependable value in old-school technology firms like Hewlett Packard EnterpriseHP IncIBMCisco Systems and Oracle. I understand that perspective, but I donโ€™t think itโ€™s time to throw in the towel on newer companies — such as AirbnbDoorDashSnowflake and Zoom โ€“ that are clearly addressing real demand in todayโ€™s economy.

Iโ€™m a true believer in the wisdom of markets โ€“ over the long term. The recent selloff may be a sign of fear, but I do not believe itโ€™s an indication of systemic weakness. The truth is that our world runs on technology, and I donโ€™t anticipate that changing anytime soon. 

As Iโ€™ve said and written before, now is the best time to be a technology leader. Iโ€™m not advising anyone to ignore fluctuations in the market โ€“ Iโ€™m just saying that in a time of uncertainty, tech remains a good investment. 

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