Tech’s biggest companies are worth ~$5T as 2019’s epic stock market run wraps

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Look, this is the last post I&m writing in 2019 and I&m tired
But I can&t let the year close without taking stock of how well tech stocks did this year
It was bonkers. So let mark the year conclusion with some notes for our future selves
Yes, we know that the Nasdaq has been setting new records and SaaS had a good year
But we need to dig in and get the numbers out so that we can look back and remember. Let cap off this year the way it deserves to be
remembered, as a kick-ass trip &round the sun for your local, public technology company. Keeping score We&ll start with the indices that we
care about: The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose 35% in 2019 The SaaS-heavy Bessemer Cloud Index rose 41% this year Next, the highest-value
U.S.-based technology companies: Microsoft was up around 55% in 2019 Apple managed an 86% gain in the year Not be left out, Facebook rose
57% Amazon posted its own gain of 23% in 2019 Alphabet managed to grow by 29%, as well Now let turn to some companies that we care about,
even if they are smaller than the Big Five: Salesforce? Up 19% this year Adobe was up 46% in 2019, which was astounding Intel picked up 28%
in the year, making it no slouch Even Oracle managed to gain 17% in 2019 And so on. The technology industry epic run has been so strong that
The Wall Street Journal noted this morning that, powered by tech companies, U.S
stocks &are poised for their best annual performance in six years.& The Journal highlighted the performance of Apple and Microsoft in
particular for helping drive the boom
I wonder why. Public investors loved SaaS stocks in 2019, and startups should be thankful How long will we live in the neighborhood of
Nasdaq 9,000? How long can two tech companies be worth more than $1 trillion at the same time? How long can the biggest tech companies be
worth a combined $4.93 trillion (I remember when $3 trillion for the Big Five was news, and I recall when the group reach a collective value
of $4 trillion).1 But the worst trade in recent years has been the pessimists& gambit
No matter what, stocks have kept going up, short-term hiccoughs and other missteps aside. For nearly everyone, that is
While tech stocks in general did very well, some names that we all know did not
Let close on those reminders that a rising tide lifts only most boats. 2019 naughty list Several of the most lackluster public tech
companies were 2019 technology IPOs, interestingly enough
Who didn&t do well? Uber earns a spot on the naughty list for not only being underwater from its IPO price, but also from its final private
valuations
And as you guessed, Lyft is down from its IPO price as well, which is not good. Some 2019 IPOs did well in the middle of the year, but fell
a little flat as the year came to a close
Pinterest, Beyond Meat and Zoom meet that criteria, for example
And some SaaS companies struggled, even if we think they will reach $1 billion in revenue in time. But it was mostly a party
The public markets were good, and tech stocks were great
This helped create another 100+ unicorns in the year. Such was 2019
On to 2020! In time, those numbers will look small
But sitting here on December 31, 2019, they appear huge and towering and, it must be said, somewhat perilously stacked.