The Magnificent 7 Are Beginning to Look Average

Growth prospects for the group of companies dubbed the Magnificent 7 are still above average, but they’re no longer magnificent. Consensus Wall Street forecasts suggest that, in aggregate, the seven large-capitalization companies will perform just a whisker better than the “S&P 493” next year, and yet investors continue to pay a premium to own them. That alone suggests it may be time to dial back their weightings in portfolios.

Consider that the group’s net income growth is expected to ping pong around 20% from here on out, according to projections compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. The other members of the S&P 500 Index are expected to see growth climb toward 16% by the end of next year. The issue is that the Mag 7 grouping trades at a median valuation of about 30 times blended forward earnings, while the other large-cap stocks in the S&P 500 Index trade at a median of 19.5 times. How long should we expect investors to overpay for increasingly similar performance?

Magnificent or just average?

To a large degree, the next two years will depend on what happens with artificial intelligence and whether the hype around its potential to disrupt the way we do business is sustained. Nvidia Corp. has become the world’s most exciting stock by providing the proverbial picks and shovels for the early days of the AI boom. Apple Inc., Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc., Meta Platforms Inc. and Alphabet Inc. have all gotten in on the excitement by investing heavily in bringing the technology to companies and consumers, in many cases sending their capital expenditures directly into Nvidia’s coffers. The companies have all become codependent and correlated, and their high valuations hinge on the idea that the merry-go-round will keep spinning. (More on odd-man-out Tesla Inc. later.)