It’s a ‘dark time for tech,’ analyst explains

Wedbush Senior Equity Analyst Dan Ives joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss tech stocks, investor sentiment, the strength of the U.S. dollar, Apple increasing iPhone production in India, and recessionary risks.

Video Transcript

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BRAD SMITH: Tech stocks slammed as the strong dollar bites hard. Economic conditions making it even more risky for companies like Facebook parent company, Meta, and Google parent company, Alphabet, that are seeing hits to their advertising businesses, especially after privacy pushes from Apple, not to mention a wind down in some of that marketing spending right now from other companies.

For more, let's bring in Dan Ives, Wedbush Managing Director and Senior Equity Analyst. Great to kick off the week with you, Dan. First and foremost, really in focus right now, even before we start this week's trading, is the FX headwinds that are going to be persistent here in the near term. You know, exactly what type of impact would you expect that to really kind of press upon some companies?

DAN IVES: Yeah, there's going to be about another 2 to 300-bit headwind for tech. And I think you'll see a lot of that come out in terms of 3Q earnings season. Obviously, for large [INAUDIBLE] it's a headwind. But I'd also say investors are basically factored in here. I mean, at these prices, that's already expectations.

It's about what non-FX demand ultimately looks like and what tech numbers cuts we're going to see. I think, a lot of that's already starting to get baked into these stocks.

BRIAN SOZZI: Hey Dan, I caught up with Slack's founder, Stewart Butterfield, at Dreamforce last week. Take a listen. I want to get your reaction on the other side. We talked about tech valuations. Here's what he said.

STEWART BUTTERFIELD: The multiples have probably come down to something that looks pretty reasonable. A lot of I think the average even for [INAUDIBLE] across the board is something like 5X forward revenue, which is, yeah, compared to I don't even know what the average was 18 or 20X or something like that at the peak.

I think the open question for investors is still, do we see a change in demand and therefore an actual change in performance? Because the multiples are probably about good. And if we collectively determine that we're not going to see a real decrease in demand, we're not going to see a real decrease in economic growth, then I think we have a lot of upside from here.

BRIAN SOZZI: Dan, when you talk to clients right now, do you get the sense they're willing to come in here and start nibbling on these discounted valuations? And then within your coverage universe, are there any screaming buys that you're looking at from a valuation perspective?