Amazon’s biggest drop since 2006 caps miserable month for tech

Amazon.com Inc. shares collapsed on Friday, with a loss in market value that ranks as one of the worst in Wall Street history after it gave an outlook that was seen as disappointing.

The stock sank 14 per cent in its biggest one-day drop since July 2006, with shares closing at their lowest level since June 2020. The selloff erased US$206.2 billion off the company’s market valuation, a wipeout exceeded only by Meta Platforms, which shed US$251.3 billion in market value after a disastrous report of its own in February.

The slump was the latest hit to the biggest names in the U.S. stock market, which came under heavy pressure in April amid a tumultuous earnings season and concerns over Federal Reserve policy. The Nasdaq 100 Index fell 4.5 per cent on Friday, bringing its April decline to 13 per cent, its biggest one-month drop since October 2008.

“Things are so weak you want to hide under your desk,” said Michael Matousek, head trader at U.S. Global Investors Inc. “People are coming to the realization that the easy money is over. There are concerns about rates going higher, about COVID, the war, and now you’re seeing weakness in the tech titans that led everything up for so long.”

Amazon fell 24 per cent for the month, its biggest one-month percentage drop since November 2008. Alphabet, which reported weak first-quarter revenue earlier this week, dropped 18 per cent in April, also its worst since November 2008.

Among other names, Apple Inc. fell 9.7 per cent for April, its biggest one-month drop since September 2020. Shares fell 3.7 per cent on Friday after it reported its results and warned about the impact that supply constraints would have on revenue. 

The tech losses were so widespread in April that even companies that reported good results weren’t spared. 

Microsoft Corp. fell 10 per cent in April, its worst one-month decline since January 2015 even after it reported results that were seen as strong. Meta Platforms Inc. fell 9.8 per cent in April, even with a huge spike in the wake of results on Thursday.

“Rising cost pressures and uncertain outlooks from the largest technology names have investors agitated going into the weekend, said Charlie Ripley, senior investment strategist for Allianz Investment Management in e-mailed comments. “Investors are not likely to be comfortable any time soon with the Fed widely expected to deliver a 50 basis point hike along with a hawkish message next week.”