Stocks to buy

While Meta Got Crushed, This “New Tech” Stock Is Soaring!

Out with the old, in with the new. It’s a saying that we’ve all heard before. And it’s happening right now in the stock market in a way that’s creating some huge opportunities

The “old tech” stocks are struggling. Just look at Meta (META). The parent company of Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp reported quarterly numbers last night. And they were an absolute mess. In response, Meta stock is crashing about 20% today to its lowest levels since 2015. The stock is now down basically 70% this year alone!

Meanwhile, a “new tech” by the name of ServiceNow (NOW) is soaring. The enterprise software provider reported excellent quarterly numbers last night. They proved that this company is growing right through the broader macroeconomic noise. Now that stock is up more than 200% over the past five years!

The trend is clear as day. Old tech stocks are struggling. New tech stocks are soaring.

So, while the smart money is looking to buy the dip in tech stocks today , the best investors are only looking to buy the dip in new tech stocks. They’re going to start soaring soon, while the old tech stocks will likely keep struggling.

Here’s a deeper look.

Meta Is Past its Prime

If last night’s numbers confirmed anything, it is that Meta is well past its prime. And the decline is happening pretty rapidly.

The company’s user base across Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp is plateauing around 2 billion daily active users and 3 billion monthly active users. Over the past 10 years, you could count on those user bases to grow by 5% to10% per year. Not anymore. Everyone who wants a Facebook account already has one. And some users are even leaving those platforms for up-and-comers like TikTok, Snap (SNAP), BeReal, and more.

Meanwhile, average-revenue-per-user rates are actually dropping, partly because engagement is falling. Plus, areas users are still spending time are quick-format videos like Reels. Meta hasn’t quite found the perfect ad mechanism yet for this format. Sure, it’ll figure that out. There are advertising geniuses at Meta. But even so, falling overall engagement will eventually put a cap on ARPU. That’s bearish.

And then there’s the company’s whole metaverse “shtick.” This past quarter, Mark Zuckerberg and company poured $3.7 billion into building out Reality Labs – the firm’s VR division. That division produced less than $300 million in revenues. That’s a huge financial investment in a project that simply isn’t showing much real-world traction. It’s weighing on operating profit margins, which tanked to 20% in the quarter. (And this used to be a 45%-plus-operating-margin firm.)

But what else is Zuckerberg to do? He sees the writing on the wall. His social apps are past their prime. The user bases have peaked, and soon, ad revenues will peak, too. He needs to find the “next big thing” to keep his company growing. He’s going all-in on the metaverse. And he may end up being right. But for now, it just looks like a desperate last-ditch attempt to stay relevant.

Put it all together, Meta is a company past its prime that’s doing everything to keep from going the way of HP (HPQ) or GE (GE). The efforts may work. In fact, I’m willing to bet they will. But not just yet – and that means Meta stock likely goes lower before it goes higher.

ServiceNow Is Just Entering its “Golden Era”

On the other hand, you have ServiceNow.

The enterprise software provider reported quarterly numbers last night, too. And they couldn’t be more different than what Meta reported.

Meta’s user base is plateauing. ServiceNow continues to grow its customer base at a 20%-plus annual clip.

Meta’s revenue growth rates have gone negative. ServiceNow is still growing revenues at a 20%-plus rate – and 25%-plus on a constant-currency basis.

Meta’s profit margins are getting destroyed. ServiceNow’s operating profit margins expanded 40 basis points last quarter to multi-quarter highs.

Meta stock is getting crushed today. ServiceNow stock is soaring.

It’s a tale of two cities. Meta is an “old tech” firm facing massive slowing growth that resembles an existential crisis. ServiceNow is a “new tech firm” sustaining robust growth rates that imply a huge runway ahead.

Our advice? Forget the old tech stocks. Buy the new tech stocks. It’s time for a changing of the guard in the technology landscape. FANG is so 2010s. It’s time to embrace a new generation of tech giants.

The Final Word on New Tech Stocks

The stock market looks like it’s ready to kill this bear market and embrace a new bull market. That means stocks will soar in 2023. And investors who buy the dip today stand to make a lot of money over the next year.

But what stocks you buy today will determine how much money you make in that time.

Some stocks will rise 10% or 20% in 2023. Some will rise 50% or 70%. Others will double or triple.

I’ve been looking for the stocks that will double or triple in 2023 – and I think I’ve found them.

See; there’s this rare market phenomenon that emerges every time a crisis appears in the economy. And it has a historically proven track record of creating some of the best buying opportunities in stock market history. I’m talking about the opportunity to turn thousand-dollar investments into million-dollar paydays.

This phenomenon just emerged for the first time since the 2008  financial crisis. And I’ve identified the stocks at the epicenter of the phenomenon – stocks that are poised to soar more than any other stock in 2023.

Find out which ones I’m talking about.

On the date of publication, Luke Lango did not have (either directly or indirectly) any positions in the securities mentioned in this article.

Articles You May Like

Data centers powering artificial intelligence could use more electricity than entire cities
5 Moonshot Stocks to Buy for 2025 
Acurx Pharmaceuticals to add up to $1 million in bitcoin for treasury reserve, following MicroStrategy’s playbook
Quantum Computing: The Key to Unlocking AI’s Full Potential?
Autonomous Vehicles: Why 2025 Will Usher in the Self-Driving Car