Here’s Where The NASDAQ 100 (QQQ) Can Go From Here

 | Mar 09, 2021 01:13AM ET

The NASDAQ 100 index (QQQ) has been the star performer of 2020 with a 46% performance. However, 2021 is proving to be a difficult year as year-to-date (YTD) performance went red at (-1.6%).

The NASDAQ 100 was home to the pandemic winners as stay-at-home mandate and lockdowns spawned the acceleration of the migration to digital and cloud. The pandemic accelerated a decade’s worth of migration in less than a year’s time as businesses adopted digital transformation to adapt to work, play, learn, entertain-at-home lifestyles.

The return to normal accelerated by COVID-19 vaccinations spurred a rotation out of growth back into value stocks which were hit the worst during the pandemic. The sell-off in the NASDAQ 100 index has been much worse than the S&P 500 index just because there’s more room for reversion. The market is again going through a price discovery period where it’s trying to figure out which pandemic stocks will remain a part of the “new normal” and which stocks were short-lived beneficiaries of a black swan event.

h2 The Hare Versus The Turtle/h2

Markets tend to overshoot extremely, setting up reversions that can also turn into strong reversals. The pre-pandemic high on the QQQ was $237.47. As the QQQ starts to break down, it’s important to keep things in perspective. While the NASDAQ 100 beat the S&P 500 performance in 2020, the shoe is on the other foot in 2021 as value is outpacing growth, very anecdotal to the hare versus tortoise tale. The S&P 500 is beating the NASDAQ 100 performance at 2.61% year-to-date (YTD) versus (-1.61%) respectively.

h2 New Normal Stickiness/h2

As rotation into the value stocks concludes, the market will then revert again to the pandemic winners that have transformed into an embedded piece of the “new normal”. The components will be the leaders in the cloud, digital transformation, telemedicine, remote work and engagement, cannabis stocks as cash-strapped states find new revenue streams via regulation rather than prohibition.

h2 Bearish Catalysts/h2

The NASDAQ 100 shares the same fundamental bearish catalysts as the S&P 500 as it pertains to systemic risk. These range from interest rates and geopolitical threats to tariff wars, inflation, credit crisis, and or another pandemic. Some or all of these factors can lean the QQQs lower, but mostly act as the “reason” why the NASDAQ sold off.