#3: Fed Pauses Often Spark 50%-Plus Melt-Ups in Tech StocksAnother big reason why tech stocks got crushed in 2022 was a series of big rate hikes from the Fed. In 2023, though, the Fed will pause its rate-hiking campaign – and as a result, tech stocks will soar.
Over the past 50 years, we’ve identified eight verifiable Fed pauses – when the central bank stops hiking interest rates after a prolonged interest rate hike cycle. Each time, that “pause” sparked a tech stock rally.
The rallies were never small.
In fact, the smallest post-Fed-pause tech stock rally in history was 21% in the late 1980s. That’s the smallest one!
On average, Fed pauses spark 44% mega-rallies in tech stocks, including two 70%-plus rallies.
In other words, these stocks don’t just have a 100% track record of rallying on Fed pauses. They have a 100% track record of soaring when the Fed pauses.
And pretty much everyone – even the Fed – agrees a pause is coming in 2023. 
#4: Valuations Are Heavily Discounted & FavorableOne of the best reasons to bet on a big 2023 rebound is the fact that tech stocks are historically very cheap right now. Whenever tech stocks do get this cheap, the odds are highly favorable that they’re going to push higher in a big way.
The data here is pretty clear and convincing.
In late 2022, the S&P 500’s technology sector’s price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple dropped below 24X. That’s very cheap for the tech sector. Normally, tech stocks trade north of 30X earnings. A sub-24X P/E multiple is among the cheapest in history.
That’s the good news.
The better news is that tech stocks tend to soar whenever they get this cheap.
Historically speaking, whenever the S&P 500’s tech sector has found itself trading below 24X trailing earnings, the stocks were higher a year later 87% of the time. The average return? About 20%.
Based on the current P/E multiple, then, history says there’s an 87% chance these stocks roar 20% higher this year.
Investing is all about odds. And when it comes to buying tech stocks right now, the odds are strongly in your favor. 
#5: Profit Margins Will Rebound in 2023Have you noticed all the layoff announcements in the tech industry lately?
This week, Coinbase (COIN) just announced that it is laying off 20% of its staff. Amazon (AMZN) is letting go of 18,000 employees. Salesforce (CRM) is cutting 10% of its workforce. Stitch Fix (SFIX) is firing 20% of its staff.
The tech layoffs are piling up.
Some read this as bad news for tech stocks. But have you also noticed how they have tended to rally after their company makes a layoff announcement?
Coinbase, for example, saw its stock jump 13% the day it announced layoffs.
When it comes to the tech industry, layoff announcements are actually good news. This means lower expenses and higher profit margins.
The reality is that tech companies over-hired during the pandemic. They added a whole bunch of operating expenses, and not all of those additional operating expenses created additional revenue. Expenses rose faster than revenues. Profit margins shrank.
Now, tech companies are “righting the ship,” so to speak. They’re cutting those additional jobs they brought on during the pandemic, which they, quite frankly, didn’t really need. So, revenues won’t be impacted, yet expenses will drop, which will lead to meaningful profit margin reexpansion.
That’s important because as profit margins go, so goes tech stocks.
When profit margins are rising, the stocks rise. When profit margins are falling, the stocks fall.
Profit margins are set to rise over the next 12 months. As they do, tech stocks should rise, too. 
I would say to drip feed into a number of ETF funds before the fed stops raising interest rates or decreases the rates. Europe normally works in step with the US interest rates. |
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