Many investors are shifting their attention to corners of the market they considered no-go zones last year, with businesses including airlines, live events companies and commercial real estate firms posting large gains
Shares of companies like Peloton and Zoom Video were darlings of the stock market for the better part of last year. But as the economic reopening gains speed, some of the stocks at the center of the so-called stay-at-home trade collapsed. (Ana Galvañ/The New York Times)
Peloton’s pricey exercise bikes were the hot product for fitness buffs in the early days of the pandemic. With jumbo screens and upbeat instructors, being on them mimicked the experience of an in-person spin class in their living rooms.
What happens now that they can get the real thing again?
Shares of companies like Peloton and Zoom Video, the online conference software that replaced face-to-face communications for countless schools and businesses, were darlings of the stock market for the better part of last year. But as the economic reopening gains speed — aided by rising vaccination numbers and promising new treatments for those who get sick — some of the stocks at the center of the so-called stay-at-home trade collapsed.
“The markets clearly sense the pandemic is over,” said Ben Emons, managing director of global macro strategy for Medley Global Advisors. “We’re in a full reopening and we’re moving toward a normalized situation.”
That has been bad news for the share prices of some of last year’s hottest stocks. Peloton dived 35% in a single trading session this month, after it deeply cut its sales forecast for the coming year. CEO John Foley said on a conference call with analysts that the company knew it would be a challenge to duplicate the results it had during the peak of the pandemic. But he added, “Our long-term thesis of fitness moving into the home is unchanged.”
©2019 New York Times News Service