• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

More Americans Plan To Claim Social Security Benefits Early

April 23, 2026

Senate Rejects Measures Meant to Lower the Cost of Gas, Groceries

April 23, 2026

Why an Unfinished Degree Can Help Your Resume (and How to List It)

April 23, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • More Americans Plan To Claim Social Security Benefits Early
  • Senate Rejects Measures Meant to Lower the Cost of Gas, Groceries
  • Why an Unfinished Degree Can Help Your Resume (and How to List It)
  • Why Flying Private Is Becoming a Business Tool, Not a Luxury
  • Meta Is Tracking Employee Keystrokes, Clicks—Causing Backlash
  • 8 Quiet Breakdowns That Emerge Post-Acquisition
  • Your Business Already Has the Most Valuable AI Asset. You Just Haven’t Extracted It Yet.
  • Trump Accounts Are Coming. How Should Employers Prepare?
Thursday, April 23
Facebook Twitter Instagram
iSafeSpend
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
iSafeSpend
Home » The Magnificent 7 Stocks Still Look Good. These 10 Smaller Stocks Could Be Even Better Buys.
Investing

The Magnificent 7 Stocks Still Look Good. These 10 Smaller Stocks Could Be Even Better Buys.

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 28, 20230 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

The rich are about to get richer. As the year wraps up, technology stocks are likely to keep heading higher.

The
Nasdaq Composite
is already up about 36% this year. But it’s still 12% off its record peak, and there are reasons to think the technology sector can gain further ground from here—both in the short run and as we head into 2024. Most important, the rally looks ready to broaden beyond the stock market’s very largest names.

The strengthening dynamic for tech dates back to the horrible year that was 2022. As you’ll remember, but would prefer to forget, the index fell 33% last year. The losses piled up as the Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy and funding sources dried up for private and public companies alike. Meanwhile, parts of the tech economy continued to suffer aftereffects of Covid-19, which caused lasting disruptions in both supply chains and normal IT buying patterns.

Conditions shifted coming into 2023. The market decided that the Federal Reserve was almost done with rate increases, raising the potential for flat and eventually lower interest rates. Also, component shortages eased.

That became a supportive backdrop for OpenAI and its launch of ChatGPT, which turns one-year old on Nov. 30. The AI chatbot triggered a furious period of investment by tech companies seeking to leverage artificial intelligence for consumer and enterprise applications.

As it became clear that playing in the AI poker game would require deep pockets, investors poured cash into the sector’s largest companies—the Magnificent Seven of
Apple
(ticker: AAPL),
Microsoft
(MSFT),
Alphabet
(GOOGL),
Amazon.com
(AMZN),
Nvidia
(NVDA),
Meta Platforms
(META), and
Tesla
(TSLA). Those stocks on average have rallied 107% this year. On an equally weighted basis, the
S&P 500
has gained just 3%. This year, bigger was better.

I’ve been speaking to a range of tech investors in recent weeks—the group is mostly bullish, and they see the spoils spreading beyond the Magnificent Seven. It boils down to a few themes: a more accommodating Fed; improving enterprise demand; the end of Covid-era spending distortions; and the rise of AI, the most impactful invention since the internet. Or movable type. Or the wheel.

Dan Niles, founder of the Satori Fund, a tech-focused hedge fund, thinks tech’s rally will extend through year end. One factor, he says, will be “window dressing” and tax-loss selling as portfolio managers spruce up their holdings for year-end disclosure reports. “Everybody wants to show they owned all the winners—the Magnificent Seven—and that they didn’t own the losers,” he says. “If your chart looks good, it keeps going up. If the chart looks bad, it keeps going down.”

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives is in sync with Niles on the near-term outlook. “There are trillions of dollars on the sidelines,” he says. “Institutions are bearish, but there’s a soft landing on the horizon, with the Fed set to cut rates next year. The spending environment for digital advertising and IT infrastructure is robust and upticking. And Street numbers are too conservative. This is the start of a new tech bull market that could last 18 to 24 months.”

Ives thinks the tech rally “spreads like a brushfire” from here, beyond the Magnificent Seven. He says the big driver will be—you guessed it—spending on AI hardware and software. But now, he contends, beneficiaries will go well beyond the megacaps that have come to dominate the AI conversation.

Ives, though, is still bullish on Microsoft and Apple, which just happen to be the two largest companies in the world by market value. He predicts both will reach $4 trillion market caps in 2024. (Apple is just below the $3 trillion level, with Microsoft a few hundred billion dollars behind.)

For Apple, which has reported four consecutive quarters of negative revenue growth, Ives sees a top line rebound, driven by iPhone sales and a growing services portfolio. Ives predicts Apple will launch “the AI App Store” in 2024, focused on generative AI apps that can run on iPhones.

Erika Klauer, a portfolio manager with Jennison Associates, also thinks conditions are shaping up for a strong 2024—and she’s as bullish as Ives about AI. “There’s still a long runway for growth,” she says.

Klauer is also a Microsoft bull despite the OpenAI turmoil. She thinks Microsoft’s aggressive approach to pricing its Copilot software for its 365 office suite—at $30 a seat a month—makes the company the “poster child” for monetizing AI enterprise software. But she notes that other companies aren’t far behind, including
Adobe
(ADBE),
ServiceNow
(NOW), and
Salesforce
(CRM). “If they’re all able to charge higher prices for AI versions of their software, that will drive the group,” she says.

Jonathan Curtis, portfolio manager of the Franklin Technology fund and the firm’s chief investment officer, told me on our Barron’s Live podcast that investors still “don’t fully appreciate what is coming on the back of generative AI.”

While his fund’s largest positions are Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, and Apple, he sees potential both up and down the AI food chain, including for chip manufacturer
Taiwan Semiconductor
(TSM); chip-design software companies
Synopsys
(SNPS) and
Cadence Design Systems
(CDNS); semiconductor equipment plays
Applied Materials
(AMAT) and
ASML
(ASML); and chips stocks
Advanced Micro Devices
(AMD) and
Marvell Technology
(MRVL).

The bottom line is that the pieces are in place for tech to reach higher highs, even after a big run. For tech investors, it’s time to give thanks.

Write to Eric J. Savitz at [email protected]

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Meta Is Tracking Employee Keystrokes, Clicks—Causing Backlash

Investing April 23, 2026

How to Show Up With Kindness, Even on Your Toughest Days

Investing April 22, 2026

7 Overlooked Ways to Cut Costs in Your Business Right Now

Investing April 21, 2026

The 5 Stages of Career Growth — and What It Takes to Reach the Next One

Investing April 20, 2026

Get Lifetime Access to 1,000+ Professional Courses for Just $19.97

Investing April 19, 2026

Here’s Why This Tech Investor Stopped Using Computers, Laptops

Investing April 18, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Senate Rejects Measures Meant to Lower the Cost of Gas, Groceries

April 23, 20260 Views

Why an Unfinished Degree Can Help Your Resume (and How to List It)

April 23, 20260 Views

Why Flying Private Is Becoming a Business Tool, Not a Luxury

April 23, 20260 Views

Meta Is Tracking Employee Keystrokes, Clicks—Causing Backlash

April 23, 20260 Views
Don't Miss

8 Quiet Breakdowns That Emerge Post-Acquisition

By News RoomApril 23, 2026

Entrepreneur Key Takeaways Acquisitions rarely fail because of what was modeled. They fail because of…

Your Business Already Has the Most Valuable AI Asset. You Just Haven’t Extracted It Yet.

April 23, 2026

Trump Accounts Are Coming. How Should Employers Prepare?

April 22, 2026

Amazon Launches Nationwide GLP-1 Weight-Loss Program

April 22, 2026
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

More Americans Plan To Claim Social Security Benefits Early

April 23, 2026

Senate Rejects Measures Meant to Lower the Cost of Gas, Groceries

April 23, 2026

Why an Unfinished Degree Can Help Your Resume (and How to List It)

April 23, 2026
Most Popular

Citadel Securities Pays $400,000. Here’s How to Stand Out.

April 21, 20262 Views

7 Overlooked Ways to Cut Costs in Your Business Right Now

April 21, 20262 Views

Are Trump’s Tariffs Really Dead? Here’s What’s Happening Behind the Scenes

April 15, 20262 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 iSafeSpend. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.