Recent Tech Weakness Normal Post Earnings Season
- InfraCap Management
- 12 hours ago
- 2 min read
The recent pullback in the market is normal after earnings season and we see substantial support for the market at 6,700, which is the 50-day moving average with even stronger support at the 100-day moving average of 6,550 during this seasonally weak period post Q3 eps season. The stock market normally rallies during earnings season as companies provide positive news when the economy is growing and post earnings season random events, news, and bear raids are common negative catalysts.
Our 2025 S&P 500 Index target is 7,000 which represents 23x 2026 S&P EPS and our target is 7,900 for 2026, which also assumes a 23x multiple. That high multiple is justified due to the ongoing AI boom, increased visibility on Fed rate cuts and historically low corporate tax rates. Targets are not just designed to signal buys but also sales. Our 7,000 target is working well this year as the market pulled back when it hit 6,940 as the Mag 8, which represents almost 40% of the S&P, are fully valued with our models currently showing only 1.8% average upside with the biggest variances being TSLA with 60% downside and META and AMZN with 30% upside. We are forecasting that TSLA misses this quarter’s EPS estimates by 50% but it is not clear than investors care. The recent tech sell-off is a good reminder of the benefits of being diversified beyond tech stocks as our more conservative income focused funds have been outperforming the market as a whole during the tech sell-off.
We do not think that AI stocks are in a bubble as the MAG 8 is fairly valued but not substantially overvalued. In addition, we believe that any major company that does not invest substantially in AI will be left behind. We do think there will be an AI bubble over the next 3 years which creates a huge opportunity for investors in today’s market. The bankruptcy of First Brands and Tricolor has created a minor panic in the credit markets which creates an opportunity for long-term investors. The auto credit market is experiencing increased defaults due to tight Fed policy, but we expect that increase in defaults to ease as a new Fed Chair cuts rates next year.






