With Big Tech Under Fire, Is Tech Still A Key Sector For Investors?

 | Mar 23, 2018 03:01AM ET

Last week, several major news outlets reported that detailed data harvested from Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) had been pressed into service by political consultancy firms under questionable circumstances. The data were harvested by researchers who were abiding by FB’s then-current policies when they collected them. But observers and some FB insiders, including former employees, allege that the company did not take the fate of the data seriously once they had been collected, and did not make serious efforts to ensure that they were not misused or sold on to other third parties in violation of FB’s terms of service. The response of FB’s management has thus far been characterized -- fairly, we think -- as tone-deaf and inadequate. While FB’s policies have changed since the data harvesting occurred, the whole event certainly does nothing to reassure investors or regulators that the company is capable of policing itself when it comes to consumer privacy protection.

FB stock is still reeling. The company’s platform remains, with that by Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG), one of the indispensable destinations for todays’ marketing dollars. The platform is not going away. But the prospect of government regulation just came into sharp focus, after having been an undercurrent of news coverage for months. This op-ed piece from November by an ex-FB employee is an articulate and heartfelt expression of the case for regulation -- and it’s an argument that is going to be heard a lot more and gather a lot more political momentum in coming weeks and months. (Note that the employee in question left FB in 2012, and the conditions he describes, even if they did obtain at the time, may no longer do so.)

Time For a Change in Stock-Market Leadership?

What does all this mean for investors?

Every stock’s price depends in the last analysis on two things: the company’s earnings, and the multiple of those earnings that investors are willing to pay (that’s the “price-to-earnings ratio” in investment speak). Companies whose earnings are growing fast typically win a higher price-to-earnings ratio from investors. FB’s historical and projected growth has been strong enough to support steady appreciation in the price of its stock since its initial public offering nearly six years ago.

However, when government gets involved with a company or an industry, the price-to-earnings multiple that investors are willing to pay almost inevitably goes down, and the change is usually dramatic. Complying with regulations slows growth. So all of a sudden, investors are reassessing what they are willing to pay for FB stock, because the chance of substantial regulation just got much more significant.

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Reassessing Companies’ Values

Of course, although stock analysts do their best to turn all of this into numbers and arrive at a fair and rational valuation of a company, precision is illusory where such big future risks to the previous consensus expectation are concerned. The current free-fall of FB’s stock shows that investors are struggling to decide what the longer-term risks really are.