How Low Can It Go? Getting to the Bottom of the Nasdaq Selloff

Momentum has turned in tech stocks and investors awakening from dreams of artificial intelligence nirvana are back to a less grandiose concern: When will the selling stop?

Down 11% from its July high, the Nasdaq 100 has now erased about a third of its AI-fueled advance, including a bruising two days that just lopped about $800 billion off share values. There’s probably more pain in store, ventured strategists and traders queried Thursday, saying price-earnings ratios have room to compress and that Treasury volatility remains too high to declare a bottom with confidence.

Nobody, of course, knows where it will end, including whether it’s already over. But here are frameworks for how to think about where a floor might be formed. Estimates are drawn from a mix of technical analysis, valuation comparisons and how much more drubbing is in store for the AI oligarchy that propelled the gains.

Back To March

While valuations were a poor tool for market timing on the way up, during reversals they sometimes work as thresholds for sentiment, as traders spy entry points. The average valuation premium of the Nasdaq 100 Index verses the S&P 500 comes out to around 30% over the past 10 years. All else equal, restoring that equilibrium requires a fall to 12,500, a level last seen in March, according to Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

“That’s probably where long-term investors will start to kick the tires, especially given some of the themes that the index is benefiting from,” Samana said. “The open-ended questions are do rates find a home around 5%, or do they go higher. And is there a recession and how hard does it hit the EPS of these growth companies?”

Still Elevated