Is Tech Merger Mania The Sign Of A Market Top?

 | Jun 10, 2015 07:20AM ET

Avago Technologies’ (NASDAQ:AVGO) $37-billion acquisition of Broadcom Corp (NASDAQ:BRCM) on May 28 represents the largest tech acquisition in history. It also capped off a frantic month of merger and acquisition (M&A) activity . May experienced a record high of $241.6 billion in M&A deals, according to Dealogic.

Great news, right? Well, not every pundit views the red-hot M&A market as a positive. Several think the strong uptick means a bust looms right around the corner. Particularly in the tech sector.

Take Barron’s Tiernan Ray, for example. He warns that:

“The signs aren’t good for plain old investors. In fact, the sale of Broadcom smells like a top in the market.”

I couldn’t disagree more.

If you’re looking at chip stocks as the canary in the stock market coal mine, you’ve got the wrong bird. Here are three reasons why…

h3 Reason #1: 916 Days… and Counting/h3

At first blush, the doomsayers’ concerns are understandable. After all, the last time we witnessed such a deal-making bonanza was back in May 2007.

In case you’ve forgotten, the market went into a tailspin four months later. The S&P 500 got crushed, losing more than 50% before it was over. So will history repeat?

Many think so because it’s been forever since the market suffered a mere 10% correction, let alone a full-on bear market. Specifically, it’s been over 916 days since the last correction, compared to an average interval of 357 days, based on recent Deutsche Bank analysis.