Megacaps bounce back

By Glenn Dyer | More Articles by Glenn Dyer

So, Wall Street is back on par with a week ago—but that disguised the big rebound in the megacaps, led by Apple, which survived the news that Warren Buffett has sold half of Berkshire Hathaway’s stake, taking a lot of money and going into US T-notes.

In fact, after predicting the end of the megacap trade in the wake of Monday’s one-day downer, the seven all fought back with big gains—and in the case of Meta and Nvidia, enormous gains for a four-day period.

More than any index or other measure, the performance of the megas tells us a lot about the health and direction of Wall Street, and as of Friday’s close, it’s determinedly up.

But there are still only two companies worth more than $US3 trillion and only two worth more than $US2 trillion.

Apple ended Friday with a gain of 1.4% and a weekly rise of a solid 8.8%, closing the week with a valuation of $US3.29 trillion, which left it clearly the most valuable company.

Microsoft elbowed its way back with a gain of 0.08% on Friday, 4.4% for the week, and a cap of $US3.02 trillion.

Nvidia saw a 13.8% surge in its value for the week, which included a near 3% gain on Friday. That saw the market cap end at $US2.58 trillion, which is still more than $US700 billion short of its high (that figure is more than Tesla’s cap).

Alphabet shares ignored the “monopolist” ruling in a US federal court (the company’s board and managers probably wear that description with pride) and ended the week up 0.95% on Friday and 5.3% for the week—its value ended at $US2.02 trillion.

Amazon’s cheer squad couldn’t get it back to the $US2 trillion level, so it had to settle with $US1.75 trillion for a small 0.7% rise on Friday and an OK gain of 8.3% for the week.

Meta broke higher in a big way, jumping 14.8% over the four days (1.6% on Friday) to end with a value of $US1.31 trillion.

Tesla joined in, though from a much lower base. Its shares added 8% over the four days (0.6% on Friday) to be valued at $US627 billion at the week’s close.

Outside this group, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway ended the week valued at $US922 billion after a gain of 4.7% (barely moved on Friday), and Netflix was up 7.2% for the week and valued at $US272 billion.

About Glenn Dyer

Glenn Dyer has been a finance journalist and TV producer for more than 40 years. He has worked at Maxwell Newton Publications, Queensland Newspapers, AAP, The Australian Financial Review, The Nine Network and Crikey.

View more articles by Glenn Dyer →