Shares of the Internet search giant are up nearly 17% over the last three months, outpacing a broader rally in the S&P 500 index over the same period by 6 percentage points.
Market
News : As Google-parent Alphabet Inc became on Thursday the
fourth U.S. company to top a market value of more than $1 trillion,
some funds holding its shares are wondering whether now is the time
to cash in on the stock's extraordinary gains.
Shares
of the Internet search giant are up nearly 17% over the last three
months, outpacing a broader rally in the S&P 500 index over the
same period by 6 percentage points.
Short
interest in the stock,
a measure of how many investors are betting on a price decline, is at
1%, near a 52-week high for the company and higher than competitors
such as Microsoft and Facebook, according to Refinitv data.
Alphabet
joins Apple, Amazon.com and Microsoft as the only U.S. companies to
hit $1 trillion in market value.
"Google
is a stock that won't get you fired," said Kevin Landis, a
portfolio manager at Firsthand Funds who hasn't added to his current
Alphabet position since the first quarter of 2019. “Will I be able
to double my money in this stock from here? I'm not sure about that.”
Alphabet's
shares are among a small group of stocks found in the top holdings of
both mutual funds and hedge funds, two types of institutions whose
investing styles tend to be markedly different, a Goldman Sachs
analysis showed. That could leave it exposed to volatile price swings
if sentiment suddenly changes.
Despite
those concerns, many investors are finding it hard to say goodbye.
The 28% climb in Alphabet and the performance of other technology and
tech-related stocks helped money managers post big gains in 2019,
making it difficult for many to justify cutting their exposure even
as they fret over the implications of its run-up.
Ernesto
Ramos, portfolio manager of the BMO Large-Cap Growth Fund, has held
onto his shares, betting that Alphabet’s exposure to online
advertising will eventually justify its above-average valuation.
Alphabet trades at 26.6 times future earnings, compared with 18.5 for
the S&P 500.
Scott
Goginsky, a portfolio manager of the Biondo Focus fund, has held off
adding to a longstanding position over the last year, concerned that
the company's costs are likely to increase due to its efforts to
pre-empt any additional regulatory measures from Washington. That
could cut into the margins of businesses like YouTube if it needs to
hire additional workers to vet user-posted content, he said.
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