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The world's hottest tech companies are now worth more than some major stock markets, and they could be pointing out the next big bubble

Akin Oyedele   

The world's hottest tech companies are now worth more than some major stock markets, and they could be pointing out the next big bubble

traders 2000 y2k glasses

Paulo Whitaker/Reuters

Stock traders wearing Y2K glasses celebrate at the last trading day 1999, where closed up with the historic record of 17,091 points, in the floor of Sao Paulo's Stock Exchange, December 30.

  • The most prominent US and Chinese tech stocks are worth more, by market cap, than the stock markets of the eurozone and Japan.
  • Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, Alphabet, Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent are worth $5 trillion, according to data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch. US tech stocks are worth even more, at a $6.6 trillion market cap.
  • Michael Hartnett, BAML's chief investment strategist, has cited this size as a reason why investors should reduce their exposure to tech stocks.
  • "Long FAAMG + BAT" is considered the most crowded trade, according to BAML's global fund-manager survey.

Here's your stat of the day: eight tech companies are worth more than the stock markets of Japan and the entire eurozone.

The companies make up what Wall Street has abbreviated to FAAMG + BAT: Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft and Google (or Alphabet) on the left, and the Chinese tech companies Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent.

As of June 12, they had a combined market capitalization of $5 trillion, according to data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Screen Shot 2018 06 18 at 10.23.44 AM

Bank of America Merrill Lynch

This ballooning in size has equally led to concern that investors are too optimistic on the future earnings power of big tech companies. BAML's monthly survey of fund managers around the world shows that for most of the past year, the "most crowded trade" has been betting on tech stocks. A recent survey showed the most crowded was thought to be "Long FAANG + BAT," while "Long Nasdaq" became a concern in the second half of last year.

The vote for the most crowded trade was briefly "long bitcoin" just before the cryptocurrency peaked above $19,000 in December.

Without declaring that we're seeing another tech bubble, Michael Hartnett, the chief investment strategist at BAML who published the chart above, recently listed this "fat" market cap stat as one of 10 reasons why investors should be pulling money out of tech stocks.

Another reason, Hartnett said, was that tech and e-commerce companies accounted for nearly a quarter of US earnings per share, a "level that is rarely exceeded, and often associated with bubble peaks."

Indeed, no sector dominates global stock markets like tech does. The MSCI USA Index of over 600 companies is driven by technology companies, which make up 27%. And on the top-10 list of the largest companies in the world, Berkshire Hathaway and Exxon are the only outliers sector-wise. Tech comes out on top in other ways you could slice the data, particularly in the US.

But it's the near uniformity in opinions on big tech stocks that could continue to reap gains for investors - or catch them off guard.

Only five out of 199 analyst ratings on FAAMG stocks say "sell, according to Bloomberg data. There are no "sell" recommendations for Apple or Amazon.

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