Cathie Wood buys falling tech stocks: Amazon, Meta, Tesla

Several ETFs at Wood’s Ark Invest bought a variety of different technology stocks after they fell along with the broader market. Ark Invest, which has $6.7 billion in assets under management, is an influential asset manager whose funds have fallen hard timesReports earlier this year showed that investors A total of $2.2 billion was withdrawn. of money due to their poor performance.

Wood hopes to change things. At least this week, Two ETFs from Ark Invest The actively managed Ark Innovation ETF bought about $45 million worth of stock in companies like Amazon, Advanced Micro Devices and Coinbase, based on the opening price on the day they were purchased. The firm’s Ark Next Generation Fund bought $9.5 million worth of Meta, Tesla and Robinhood stock, based on the same calculations. Both funds bought other stocks as well.

All of these companies were involved in the massive market crash, but it remains unclear whether Woods was buying stocks at bargain prices or just as the market was beginning to collapse.

“She could be right or she could be wrong,” says George Kaylas, CEO of Prospero.ai, a fintech investment platform. “She’s definitely been right in the last couple of years.”

Ark Invest declined to comment and instead directed luck to video Where Wood discussed recent market moves.

Kailas points to ArkInvest’s bet on Tesla, which made the company a fortune when its stock soared in 2021. Since then, however, ArkInvest’s performance has been more disappointing. The Next Generation Internet Fund, which invests in cloud-related internet companies, is down 2% so far this year. Meanwhile, ArkInvest’s flagship fund, the Innovation ETF, is down about 20% for the year. no Exchange-traded funds have reached the heights they reached in 2021.

The decline in technology stocks coincided with, or some would say led to, Global Sales In all stock markets. On Friday, stock market indices from Japan to the United States saw sharp declines in a single day. Since then, stocks in both Japan and the United States have fallen sharply. Nicky and the S&P 500 index recoil But the rally isn’t enough to allay some investors’ concerns that it’s just a short-lived recovery in slumping stock prices. “I feel like this is a temporary rebound,” said Gene Goldman, chief investment officer at financial services firm Cetera.

Goldman expects a “peak-to-trough decline in the S&P 500 of 10% or more.”

Kailas agreed, though hesitantly, saying that if he had to pick a direction for the stock market, it would be “a little more bearish.”

There’s a group of long-term growth investors, like Wood, who see the current market as an opportunity. Many tech companies are still in good shape, even if the market is turbulent, making their cheap shares a bargain, UBS said in an analyst note published Thursday.

“Tech fundamentals remain strong, in our view, while valuations are now back on the downside,” the analysts wrote.

UBS said it expects global technology sector earnings to grow 20% to 25% year-on-year in the second quarter. The bank also forecast sustained earnings growth of 15% to 20% over the next year and a half.

Still, even investors who want to move are moving cautiously. “I’m still not buying,” says one prominent tech investor and former portfolio manager. Paul Mix“Although I like the price, I don’t like the timing.”

In the US, investors were dealt an unexpected blow when the Federal Reserve chose to delay a rate cut at its July meeting. Markets are now treating a September rate cut as a near certainty. UBS remains bullish on technology stocks in part because of what it calls “technical factors” that have more to do with the overall economy than with individual companies themselves.

For Kailas, there are other big factors that worry him, particularly the U.S. elections. “Part of what’s really tough is that we’re seeing declines, which I think are tied to political and geopolitical issues,” he said.

Trying to predict the outcome of any election can be a headache for investors. But this time, the possibility of Republicans and Democrats winning could spell a different future for the tech sector. Meeks said any potential administration doesn’t offer a clear picture of what kind of regulation it will pursue in tech.

Democrats have shown their determination to Regulating Big Tech Companies This is largely unprecedented. On the other hand, the party’s vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris Close Links To some of the prominent figures from Silicon Valley.

Meanwhile, the Republican ticket presents its own source of uncertainty. Vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance is a former investment banker. Supported by influential Tech names like Peter Thiel. However, former President Donald Trump brought up Comprehensive Definitions On Chinese imports that could hamper some tech companies that are already struggling with cash shortages. Some stocks sent sharp rises. When is Proposal Taiwan pays the United States for protection. “I’ve never seen this kind of behavior, especially with Trump,” Kailas said.

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