Welcome | Sign In
LinuxInsider.com
News

Tech Stocks Stumble into New Year

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Tech Stocks Stumble into New Year

Despite the poor start for tech stocks in 2001, analysts are cautiously optimistic about an upswing in earnings momentum in the second half of the year.


Increase Customer Sales with VerticalResponse Email Marketing! Quickly and easily send email newsletters, coupons & sales announcements to your customers – no technical expertise needed. Sign up for your Free Trial today and send 100 emails on us!

The new year has yet to bring many happy returns for high-tech stocks, which continued their stumble Tuesday amid long-standing earnings fears and concern about a cooling economy.

The Nasdaq composite stock index fell almost 178.66, or 7.23 percent, to 2291.86, its lowest close since March 1999. The decline represented the seventh-largest percentage fall ever for the index.

Similarly, the E-Commerce Times stock index, which monitors 10 prominent dot-coms including Amazon and eBay, fell 7.93 percent.

Although a widespread tech stock sell-off in December helped reduce stock prices, wary investors spurned the bargain shares.

Tech Downgrades

Adding to the unease in the sector were a batch of downgrades Tuesday in the Internet infrastructure and business software development arena by investment bank Robertson Stephens.

The firm said that although it had "previously viewed [those sectors] as relatively immune," it now believes information technology spending environment is "weakening."

Among the companies targeted by Robertson Stephens were data-storage company EMC (NYSE: EMC), which fell $12.19, or 18.33 percent, to close at 54.31; e-commerce software security developer VeriSign (Nasdaq: VRSN) (Nasdaq: VRSN), which slid 16.69 percent to close at a 52-week low of $61.81; and Network Appliance Corp. (Nasdaq: NTAP), which shed $12.75 to close at $51.44.

Network-enhancing software maker Inktomi (Nasdaq: INKT) was downgraded by both Robertson Stephens and influential Merrill Lynch analyst Henry Blodget, who said that he expected slower spending by consumers in the sector. Inktomi lost $3.31, or 18.51 percent, to close at a 52-week low of $14.56.

In addition, industry giants Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO) and Sun Microsystems (Nasdaq: SUNW) both fell to some of their lowest levels in a year. Cisco lost $4.94, or 12.92 percent to close at $33.31, while Sun dropped 8.75 percent to close at $25.44.

Manufacturing Slowdown

The market also received bad news Tuesday from the National Association of Purchasing Management's monthly manufacturing index for December, which showed that U.S. manufacturing during the month hit its lowest level in a decade.

The new low for manufacturing confirmed fears that the U.S. economy is slowing down.

Cautious Optimism

Despite the poor start for tech stocks in 2001, analysts remain cautiously optimistic about tech stock performance and an upswing in earnings momentum in the second half of the year, led by forecasted interest rate cuts by the U.S. Federal Reserve later this month.

Although many formerly high-flying Net stocks crashed in 2000, analysts say that technological growth will continue.

"The Internet infrastructure build-out should continue in all but the worst circumstances," Merrill Lynch first vice president Steve Milunovich reportedly wrote Tuesday in a note to clients. "We expect companies to use Web technologies more to gain internal efficiencies than drive new revenue streams in 2001."


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Clare Saliba


Related News Alerts

VeriSign Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by Clare Saliba

One Year Ago: Report: Shipping Costs Bleed E-tailers Dry
February 11, 2002
To get Internet purchases delivered on time and efficiently, many Web merchants will turn to online fulfillment networks and drop shippers.
Jupiter, NetRatings Renew Patent Lawsuit
January 21, 2002
Though still pursuing their merger, Internet measurement firms Jupiter Media Metrix and NetRatings now intend to re-open their patent litigation.
One Year Ago: Power-Starved California Turns To Internet Auction
January 25, 2002
Because of a disastrous experiment in gas and electric deregulation, California's power companies are in dire financial straits.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network