Mag 7 starting to underperform [pdf] (apollo.com)

136 points by mooreds 3 hours ago

throw0101d 2 hours ago

Historically stocks that had a good run then tended to underperform:

> […] Since 1926, the median ten-year return on individual U.S. stocks relative to the broad equity market is –7.9%, underperforming by 0.82% per year. For stocks that have been among the top 20% performers over the previous five years, the median ten-year market-adjusted return falls to –17.8%, underperforming by 1.94% per year. Since the end of World War II, the median ten-year market-adjusted return of recent winners has been negative for 93% of the time. The case for diversifying concentrated positions in individual stocks, particularly in recent market winners, is even stronger than most investors realize.

* https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4541122

M3L0NM4N 2 hours ago

I mean these stocks have been performers for decades. If you posted this 10 years ago you'd look really wrong.

Lerc 2 hours ago

Yes, but when their run ends they tend to underperform.

Every time.

nvme0n1p1 2 hours ago

eternal_braid 2 hours ago

c22 an hour ago

ertgbnm 2 hours ago

davedx an hour ago

pkilgore an hour ago

ohyes 2 hours ago

dheera an hour ago

> Historically stocks that had a good run then tended to underperform

This is more of a mathematical axiom than a financial effect, because you're defining "underperform/overperform" with respect to an average that contains them.

zerobees 2 hours ago

I am invested in some of the companies that are downstream of the capital expenditures of Big Tech (e.g., COHR), so I have nothing to complain about.

I am really struggling to see what's the investment thesis behind Google valuation increasing 2x in response to AI, though. Assuming no magical AGI singularity, by the end of the day, they're still selling the same services, but the services have gotten more expensive for them to provide. Everyone was already using Google Search, but now, provisioning AI summaries on top of requires more compute. Everyone was already using Google Docs and Meet, but now, AI features cost Google more. Etc, etc.

The only place where they stand to make money is selling AI compute to enterprises. But with the current supply-chain challenges, the margins there are probably getting thinner.

haberdasher 2 hours ago

`I am really struggling to see what's the investment thesis behind Google valuation increasing 2x in response to AI`

Google is basically Nvdia (TPUs), Tesla (Waymo Self-Driving), Hyperscaler, Netflix (YouTube) and a massive VC (Anthropic, Databricks, SpaceX, etc.) all rolled into one.

Their valuation isn't really a 2x'ing so much as a reversion from halving.

cik 2 hours ago

It's frequently said that vonglomerates usually carry through as their valuation, the multiplier of the lowest holding. If that's the case, Alphabet is worth more broken up. Similarly that makes their current valuation (and nay any valuation) theoretically too low.

nradov an hour ago

The investment thesis is a torrent of cash arriving to index funds and retirement target date funds has to go somewhere.

blehn 44 minutes ago

Google is a good bet because if AI continues to boom, they're in a good position (frontier lab, vertically integrated). If the bubble bursts and the frontier labs fail, they might do even better.

epolanski an hour ago

I know several non tech companies that use Gemini and NotebookLM heavily (banks, insurance, consulting).

senordevnyc 2 hours ago

Google is a money printing machine, and their Q1 revenue and profit were up significantly vs last year.

solumunus 2 hours ago

The market runs on memes, hype and fraud. Fundamentals haven’t mattered for a long time.

senordevnyc 2 hours ago

I guess Google’s Q1 earnings of $62 billion were just hype.

ponkpanda an hour ago

mixedbit an hour ago

Could outperformance of largest cap companies be partially explained by dividends paid by smaller caps? Reasoning behind this:

* Index investing raises in popularity, with index funds that automatically reinvest dividends being often preferred due to their tax efficiency.

* Large caps prefer to repurchase stocks, stock repurchases contribute fully towards a given company share price increase.

* Smaller caps still pay dividends, these dividends are then reinvested by index funds and the reinvestment is weighted by capitalization, so large caps share price benefits more from repurchases done with dividend cash paid by smaller caps. When dividend is paid, share price of a company that paid it is reduced, which further widens the performance gap between large and smaller caps.

bwfan123 2 hours ago

I like that the invisible hand of market is slapping the Mag-7 for capex which is the only way to discipline them. Investors are waking up to say: hey, you are spending all your profits on data-centers, where is the return for me ? But, it surprises me that there are vast pools of capital which we collectively call the "market" that makes these calculations, or maybe a simpler causal explanation is the missing stock repurchase bid. At some point, one of the hyperscalers (msft ?) will break from the pack and announce reductions to capex and increase stock repurchases to stem the decline.

ares623 2 hours ago

Why is Apple included though?

eitally an hour ago

My perception is that the market lumps companies together into sectors whether they have similar business models or not. When one is punished, other associated firms tend to be, too. You see this in any industry (not as a guaranteed rule, but in general).

DaedalusII 33 minutes ago

because $100bn annual revenue, high FCF, high margin. Its a monster.

tomrod 2 hours ago

Share repurchases also aren't great I guess?

TravisJamison 2 hours ago

jnwatson 2 hours ago

While I agree with other comments indicating that the headline is drawing on a small period of data, other data in the deck is pretty compelling.

Page 25 "The number of data centers in the US" gives an interesting insight as to the magnitude of the data center boom. 60% more data centers are being planned or are under construction. This might actually be underselling it in dollar amount, as I believe the average data center size under construction is larger than the average data center already constructed.

Page 27 "Cyclically adjusted P/E ratio near all-time highs" is certainly concerning and points to a near term correction.

mattas 2 hours ago

Apollo should be smart enough to know that you can't draw any conclusions from 1 month of market data (especially when there was a big, relevant IPO).

bradfa 2 hours ago

Right, but they're smart enough to know how to manipulate the market short term with such "research" and then take advantage of it, all without breaking the law.

jackb4040 2 hours ago

I'm astoundingly unimpressed by the quality of this slide deck. There's no analysis except that crammed into slide titles, like it's designed to bombard a room full of analysts with so many graphs that they shut off their critical thinking. Could a freshman business student not make this? Could a freshman business student with an LLM not make something more convincing than this?

I agree with the headline, but this really feels like analysis-slop. It's only remarkable in terms of who is publicizing it.

mattas 2 hours ago

This was my reaction, as well. It's almost entirely technical analysis mumbo jumbo.

vb-8448 2 hours ago

Actually it's almost 2 months /s

Danox 2 hours ago

Nothing wrong, necessarily, but Tesla doesn’t belong to that seven they never have.

abirch 2 hours ago

What TSLA lacks in cashflow, they more than make-up in TAM. Make-up as in create out of thin air. We'll have self driving cars in a few months, robots, semi-trucks, etc., etc.

flowerthoughts an hour ago

Elon is missing the bigger TAM here. Once they've created a time machine, they can not only sell all these things backwards and forwards in time, they can also start making industrialization come way earlier, which will lead to exponentially turbo charged growth. Plus importing future designs into the now.

It makes sense to focus all effort into building a time machine.

ajmurmann 2 hours ago

Always a few months away. The nuclear fusion of products portfolios.

duped 2 hours ago

Don't forget that no auto manufacturer in the world, and certainly not in China, is poised to capture any of that TAM.

jknoepfler an hour ago

Maybe they'll buy a failing AI company and update their grift portfolio.

gandalfgeek 2 hours ago

6 months ago when Mag7 was overperforming everyone was worried about it being too high a fraction of the S&P500.

andxor 2 hours ago

Exactly. As usual people are bullish at the top and bearish at the bottom.

TravisJamison 2 hours ago

Markets are obviously, rationally, not happy about the overspending.

But what gives me pause is that a some of the mag 7 (think Meta) could change their mind on AI build-out tomorrow, and 1-year from now have the same amazing free cash flow they always did.

2748484848 30 minutes ago

I don't think most people quite grasp the sheer size of the debt obligations Meta and specially Oracle have gotten into. Meta has done some clever tricks to keep it off the main books, but it IS there. If no AGI, its gonna drag them down for a decade.

infecto 2 hours ago

I tend to agree. I suspect if we look back a few years from now that there was some overspending but I still believe the risk of not investing and missing out is greater than the current historical trend of capex spend. I have not looked recently but has demand of compute started to slow down. It was just a few months ago when companies like Anthropic were throttling users because there was not enough of it.

ianm218 2 hours ago

What has been the best way to determine return on the AI specific capex for hyperscalers?

I would naively expect Microsoft’s to be the highest since they are probably mainly just selling access to their capex through cloud since they aren’t seriously pursuing frontier AI, I’d imagine Google to be in the middle (selling TPUs, general cloud GPUs, Gemini, revenue lift on ads from better AI) but also spending heavily on infra to compete with OAI/ Anthropic, and then Meta to be on the low end since they are likely getting serious revenue lift from AI but not monetizing their models by API.

patrickk 2 hours ago

On slide 6, they list the Mag7 stocks (not defined in a foreword), but on slide 8 they list the free cash flow (FCF) of a somewhat different set of companies. Why not stick to the Mag7 FCF only? It muddies the waters.

enopod_ an hour ago

True. This slide also struck me the most, but for the data it shows. Free cash flow for all the hyperscalers basically evaporated in the last couple of months, with Oracle in the minus. What does this mean?

sroussey 2 hours ago

Apple is not burning its cash on buildout, which would make their graph less interesting.

anonu 2 hours ago

the FCF slide is for hyperscalers - which excludes TSLA, NVDA

patrickk an hour ago

Yes but the Mag 7 is the main focus, suddenly switching to a different set of companies is comparing apples to oranges. That slide belongs in an annex.

dualvariable an hour ago

geori 2 hours ago

OMG - ridiculous to evaluate it based on the last 3 mo.

bArray 2 hours ago

I think page 4 is a little disingenuous, I'm pretty sure you could pick lots of windows and show the mag 7 deviating negatively, but then later trends positive. I believe this whole thing will pop, but I'm not quite convinced it is just yet.

Page 8 for Oracle's free cash flow trending negative is really quite impactful. The Bloomberg AI bubble diagram [1] shows how this could really blow up. If Oracle falls they could take the whole market with them. We're just waiting on the mag 7 or any closely linked companies to fail to raise investment.

Page 16 really outlines how insane these evaluations are. I think most countries see it, hence aggressive selloffs of US bonds [2]. But everybody is just too insanely heavily exposed to it all now, it's going to wipe out everything. It's going to be a very awful time when heavily debt strapped countries can't issue debt anymore.

I think what we're going to see is some insane moves to keep these companies afloat longer in some desperate attempt to delay the pop, which will just make a bigger bubble. I could see Nvidia for example issuing bonds in excess of $100bn soon if the market has appetite for it [3].

[1] https://archive.is/0bYLS

[2] https://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/china-japan-uae-india-sell...

[3] https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/nvidia-raises-over-21-5bn-...

nh23423fefe an hour ago

I only care what the market is at >25 years from now

Barbing 30 minutes ago

Yeahhh but...

OK, I guess it _would_ be pretty hard to have an _unrecoverable_ crash...

ohyes 2 hours ago

as soon as you start calling a group of stock tickers the “magnificent 7” they’re destined to underperform, as that’s a feelings based assessment and many investors will continue to buy the feelings long past the value being fair.

“Do they make money? I don’t know but I know they’re magnificent!”

ai-x 31 minutes ago

Completely missing the point of not adding Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceX.

Mag7 is just an arbitrary list of companies that were coined at a specific time with no rigor.

If you must do rigorous analysis, then just like S&P 500 you need to add drop BigTech / High Growth companies continuously to this Mag7 (or Mag10) and then do analysis

gniv 2 hours ago

Some of this might be mechanical since so much money went into the chip companies.

highfrequency 2 hours ago

Hyperscaler free cash flow chart is interesting, but why does it omit Apple?

amelius 2 hours ago

See also:

https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/article/magnificent-7-stoc...

> The once high-flying "Magnificent Seven" are looking more like the Dreadful Seven.

> The why: Wall Street is growing increasingly impatient with Big Tech's astronomical capital expenditures on artificial intelligence, projected to balloon 70% to exceed $700 billion this year.

tptacek 2 hours ago

This is like a straightforward Red Queens Race story, isn't it?

TheAtomic an hour ago

That free cash flow drop at AMZN is surprising.

ekjhgkejhgk an hour ago

haha Oracle bleeding money. If AI ended up killing Oracle that would've been so great.

davidpapermill 2 hours ago

Planned Capex for 2026:

Amazon $200B

MS $190B

Alphabet $175B-$185B

Meta $115B-135B

Danox 2 hours ago

Apple is nowhere to be found.

davidpapermill 2 hours ago

guluarte 2 hours ago

This feels like telecom "massive demand, bad returns".

If a good enough model can be swapped in every few months, the value moves away from the model and toward cheap inference. That is great for users, but not always great for returns on huge capex.

interestpiqued 2 hours ago

The only mag 7 that had a shooter chance with models is Google rn so doesn’t seem like there being good enough models will be that negative for mag 7. Might even be better since they are the providers for the inference

int32_64 2 hours ago

The dumps on memory/hardware stocks when these companies scale back purchasing is going to make Trump's shitcoins look sovereign bonds

-signed a bitter somebody that had to buy a new SD card for my camera last week.

epolanski an hour ago

Not mentioned in the comments but all those companies are taking significant debt and even issuing new shares.

One major part of the investment thesis in these companies were their constant stock buy backs. Now their gargantuan Capex that sees no end but acceleration is back at diluting investors.

I think the companies will keep doing fine, but the financial outlooks are no longer as rosy.

anonu 2 hours ago

I guess "nothing lasts forever".

rvz 2 hours ago

Of course. The rest 'n vest people at FAANG companies will tell you its lasts forever 6 years ago. Now they are scared for their jobs.

This is why we are seeing a correction at those companies, perks and free food going away with constant layoffs and all time low morale.

Now the party is at Nvidia. But I will tell you that that will not last forever either.

Espressosaurus 2 hours ago

Everything reverts to the mean in the long term.

Maybe even the state of unprecedented relative peace we had enjoyed.

re-thc 2 hours ago

It is less that the Mag 7 is starting to underperform and more that a market correction is likely and coming very soon.

uejfiweun 2 hours ago

This is probably a hot take and I am by no means a financial expert and this is probably quite wrong. I personally think that attempting to value these companies using the same methodology as the history of all American companies is fundamentally wrong. Sure, some mom and pop small local regional business that overperformed is probably more likely to underperform. But when it comes to big tech companies, these companies are operating a data and capital flywheel that doesn't easily just slow down. I mean, you look at the history of these computer tech companies, especially software companies. They really haven't slowed down. Like, look at Microsoft. It's just been growing from the very beginning, pretty much.

wolframhempel 3 hours ago

This seems healthy to me. A market where returns are less dependent on seven mega-cap names is probably more stable, not less. If earnings growth broadens out and capital starts flowing back toward quality and free cash flow outside the obvious AI winners, that should reduce concentration risk and make the whole market less fragile.

kingleopold 2 hours ago

they are building new narritaves with made up BS name like mag 7 this, that. it used to be faang BS but they updated so lower IQ folks gets into new narratives. Marketing dep. and fin. engineering working together. Another older one was ZIRP that, ZIRP this and you see lower and avg. IQ folks talk about it along with lots of bots. ZIRP bots stopped so MAG whatever bots can take over.

Waiting for next game, bets are open, any new names? O A S I S? upcoming IPOs and new names needed so they can exit scam

edot 3 hours ago

You can tell these guys know nothing about LLMs or how they’re provided. I love how they show OpenRouter’s graph of token usage as if it speaks for usage across the board. DeepSeek looks like the king because people who use Anthropic and OpenAI use them on either a direct basis or AWS Bedrock …

And the bar chart for token costs, really? As if that’s information? Their sources are the API docs ffs. If they had at least modeled something to estimate token costs that would be interesting, but showing the public prices and calling it research is dumb.

pj_mukh 2 hours ago

"I love how they show OpenRouter’s graph of token usage as if it speaks for usage across the board."

I'm not sure what was said during what looks like a deck of a presentation? I'm hoping it wasn't this, because that's an obvious misfire.

toomuchtodo 2 hours ago

Apollo Group has $1T assets under management, I believe them over most folks on HN. Their argument that the Mag 7 is burning up all of their free cash flow is factually accurate, as the returns are not materializing for the investments being made (ie underperformance).

davidpapermill 2 hours ago

The Mag 7 spending around $700B on capex this year, expected around a trillion next year.

That's more than their combined FCF, and they're borrowing to bridge the gap.

Danox 2 hours ago

roboror 2 hours ago

If we're doing money=smart, the mag 7 control almost $4T in assets and cash, so wouldn't you trust them even more?

toomuchtodo 2 hours ago

petesergeant 2 hours ago

> Apollo Group has $1T assets under management, I believe them over most folks on HN

Ah, the old _argumentum ad giletum Patagoniae_

serf 2 hours ago

re-thc 2 hours ago

> Apollo Group has $1T assets under management, I believe them over most folks on HN

If only that's a measure of if they know how to time the stock market. The real measure is how much they earn not if their sales or marketing department manages to get more customers.