tech

Tech Valuations Fall to 2019 Levels, Goldman Says

FC
Fazen Capital Research·
7 min read
1,874 words
Key Takeaway

Goldman Sachs warned on Apr 7, 2026 that tech forward multiples compressed ~25% and Nasdaq 100 was down ~12% YoY, signaling selective entry points for institutional investors.

Lead

Goldman Sachs published a note on Apr 7, 2026 that flagged technology sector valuations as materially compressed compared with recent peaks, creating what the bank described as a potential entry point for long-term investors (source: Yahoo Finance, Apr 7, 2026). The bank cited valuation multiples that have retraced to levels not seen since 2019, driven by a combination of weaker revenue guidance, multiple compression and outflows from momentum-oriented strategies. Market performance data show notable divergence: the Nasdaq 100 traded roughly 12% below its level one year prior as of early April 2026, while the S&P 500 was flat over the same period (Refinitiv, Apr 6, 2026). Institutional flows have shifted: active managers in the technology sleeve recorded net outflows in Q1 2026, whereas value-oriented mandates saw inflows, according to industry trackers referenced by Goldman. This report and the subsequent market commentary have reignited debate among allocators about whether depressed multiples reflect structural secular change or a cyclical trough offering selective buying opportunities.

Context

The Goldman note arrives after a year of increasing differentiation inside what had been a homogenously high-growth cohort. From late 2021 through 2023, investors routinely paid elevated premiums for revenue and earnings growth expectations; by contrast, the period from mid-2024 through Q1 2026 has been characterized by repeated downward revisions to guidance from large-cap software and cloud names. Goldman quantified the compression in multiples relative to prior peaks, pointing to the median forward P/E across a basket of U.S. large-cap tech firms contracting near 2019 levels (Goldman Sachs, cited in Yahoo Finance, Apr 7, 2026). That re-rating has not been uniform: semiconductor equipment and AI hardware providers have largely outperformed peers, while high-multiple software firms linked to discretionary IT spend have seen steeper declines.

Macroeconomic variables feed into the valuation debate. Real interest rates — a key driver of long-duration asset pricing — have oscillated through 2025 and into 2026; Goldman noted that a one percentage-point decline in the nominal risk-free rate would materially expand valuations for long-duration tech names, all else equal. Meanwhile, capex signals from corporate IT budgets are mixed: some large enterprises are deferring projects, while hyperscalers continue to expand data center footprints. For institutional investors this creates a bifurcated opportunity set where growth-at-a-reasonable-price and deep cyclicals both coexist within 'technology' classification.

Policy and regulatory developments add a second-order effect. Regulatory scrutiny in the EU and heightened antitrust dialogue in the U.S. increase uncertainty around business models for platform companies; Goldman’s note highlights that these non-linear regulatory risks are priced differently across firms and should be modeled explicitly rather than assumed away. Taken together, macro, corporate earnings, and regulatory vectors explain part of the multiple contraction Goldman describes, but not all — a degree of market sentiment-driven selling also contributed to the volatility observed in early 2026.

Data Deep Dive

Goldman’s communication referenced three specific datapoints that institutional allocators should weigh. First, the bank observed that the median forward P/E for a select cohort of large-cap U.S. tech firms had compressed approximately 25% from its recent peak, returning to a band last seen in 2019 (Goldman Sachs via Yahoo Finance, Apr 7, 2026). Second, market-level performance shows the Nasdaq 100 down about 12% YoY as of Apr 6, 2026, whereas the S&P 500 was roughly flat over the same interval (Refinitiv, Apr 6, 2026). Third, Goldman cited shifts in active fund flows: Q1 2026 experienced net outflows from growth-oriented tech ETFs on the order of several billion dollars, while value-oriented and diversified strategies registered net inflows (industry flow trackers cited by Goldman, Apr 2026).

Cross-sectional comparisons provide additional clarity. Semiconductor capital equipment firms and certain enterprise hardware suppliers delivered positive absolute returns in Q1 2026, outperforming the broader tech cohort by 600–900 basis points, underscoring the current divergence between hardware/capex beneficiaries and software/SAAS names dependent on discretionary spending. In terms of valuation metrics, select hardware names trade at forward EV/EBITDA multiples near their five-year averages, while some cloud-native software firms trade at forward revenue multiples 30–50% below their pandemic-era peaks. These discrepancies indicate that headline statements about “tech” undervaluation mask substantial intra-sector variance.

It is also instructive to consider liquidity and market structure. The rotation out of momentum and into value influenced intraday volatility and widened bid/ask spreads for smaller-cap tech equities in late Q1 2026; average daily trading volumes contracted for the highest-multiple names by approximately 20% versus 2024 levels (exchange data, Q1 2026). Illiquidity in thinly traded growth names can exaggerate price moves on incremental flow; therefore, any decision set that treats the sector homogenously will likely misprice execution risk.

Sector Implications

For large-cap platform companies (AAPL, MSFT, GOOGL, AMZN) the valuation reset reduces downside at current prices but also compresses the expected return on incremental growth capital absent meaningful margin expansion. These firms continue to generate substantial free cash flow — Apple reported trailing twelve-month free cash flow in the tens of billions and Microsoft continues to post double-digit operating income margins — but the market now demands clearer evidence that top-line growth will re-accelerate or margins will expand further. By contrast, mid-cap and small-cap technology firms face more idiosyncratic risk: weaker balance sheets, shorter cash runways, and greater sensitivity to enterprise IT spend cycles.

Passive indices that overweight mega-cap growth names have thus far been more resilient than baskets of mid-cap tech stocks; however, active managers focusing on select trough valuations can achieve differentiated exposure. For example, firms with annuity-like revenues and high incremental margins are now trading at one- to two-turn discounts to their historical norms, presenting potential opportunities for investors with high conviction and sufficient due diligence capacity. At the aggregate level, Goldman’s view that depressed valuations could be an entry point implies a longer-term time horizon — a view that aligns with the observed shift of capital toward longer-dated, fundamental-oriented strategies in Q1 2026.

Regionally, European and Asian tech firms display their own dynamics. Some European software names trade at steeper discounts relative to U.S. peers, driven by weaker earnings momentum and smaller investor bases, while select Asian semiconductor manufacturers continue to attract premium multiples on structural demand for chips. These regional nuances argue for tailored allocations rather than a uniform global tech exposure.

Risk Assessment

Valuation compression can mask two broad classes of risk: secular impairment of business models, and cyclical factors that reverse over an investment horizon. The former includes structural declines in addressable markets, intensifying competition, or irreversible regulatory penalties; the latter covers macro and interest-rate reversals, transient soft patches in demand, or investor sentiment cycles. Distinguishing between these outcomes requires rigorous scenario analysis and stress-testing of revenue and margin assumptions, particularly for high-multiple businesses whose valuations are most sensitive to discount-rate changes.

Liquidity and execution risk are salient. Concentrated positions in low-float technology names can suffer outsized slippage if market sentiment deteriorates further. Counterparty and derivative exposures also magnify downside in turbulent markets; therefore institutional managers should explicitly model delta, gamma, and convexity risks when constructing portfolios that overweight the currently depressed segments. Moreover, corporate governance issues and post-transaction integration risks remain non-trivial for midsize tech firms pursuing M&A as a route to scale.

Operationally, currency and geopolitical risks complicate cross-border exposures. A movement toward reshoring or export controls in 2025–26 amplified supply-chain risk pricing for hardware OEMs; investors must incorporate these operational contingencies into valuation models rather than assuming mean reversion. These non-linear risks can materially change both probability-weighted outcomes and required returns.

Fazen Capital Perspective

Fazen Capital views Goldman’s signal as a timely reminder that market-generated price dislocations create an active manager’s opportunity set, not an automatic buy signal. Our analysis suggests that while headline multiples have reset, durable opportunity requires three conditions: (1) visibility into sustainable cash flow generation, (2) governance and capital allocation alignment, and (3) manageable execution and liquidity risk. Contrarian allocations should therefore be selective — favoring cash-generative platforms, hardware franchises with secular tailwinds, and software businesses with predictable renewal economics and strong retention metrics.

We also highlight a non-obvious insight: in past cycles (2018–2019, 2020–2021) the best entry points were not the lowest headline multiples but the junctures where revenue momentum stabilized and guidance turned neutral-to-positive. Accordingly, Fazen’s preferred approach combines valuation discipline with event-driven triggers — for example, confirmed margin expansion, a rebound in enterprise IT spend, or demonstrable customer retention improvements. This hybrid framework mitigates the risk of catching a value trap that looks cheap but has deteriorating fundamentals.

Practically, Fazen supports a staged reallocation that balances lower-volatility platform exposures (to capture a broad-based trough) with high-conviction, small-bucket positions in select cyclicals and hardware names where secular demand (e.g., AI compute, data-centre capex) is most visible. Readers may find our prior work on market cycles and valuation regime shifts relevant: [technology valuations](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [market cycles](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).

Outlook

If real rates ease and corporate guidance stabilizes, the probability of multiple expansion for long-duration tech names increases materially; under that scenario, early selective buyers could realize outsized returns over a multi-year horizon. Conversely, if earnings downgrades persist and credit conditions tighten, further downward revisions are possible, particularly for firms with high burn rates or elevated leverage. Investors should therefore track three high-frequency indicators: aggregate tech earnings revisions (weekly), enterprise IT spend surveys (monthly), and fund-flow trends into growth vs value ETFs (weekly), as these signal near-term directionality.

We forecast a continued bifurcation across the technology complex through 2026: hardware and semiconductor-related equities are likely to outperform cyclical weakness in consumer and discretionary software names if capex cycles re-accelerate. Strategic reallocations executed with staggered sizing and predefined liquidity thresholds will likely outperform both blanket de-risking and indiscriminate buying. Fazen recommends maintaining a playbook that ties allocation moves to observable, rule-based triggers rather than subjective conviction alone.

Bottom Line

Goldman Sachs’ Apr 7, 2026 note that technology valuations have retraced to multi-year lows is a meaningful market signal that requires selective, data-driven responses rather than generalized statements about 'tech' being cheap. Institutional investors should focus on idiosyncratic fundamentals, liquidity, and macro-rate sensitivity when assessing allocation changes.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

FAQ

Q: How should institutional investors differentiate between cyclical and secular risks in tech? A: Use a three-layer framework: analyze revenue durability (renewal rates, long-term contracts), margin sustainability (unit economics and fixed-cost leverage), and balance-sheet resilience (cash runway and leverage). Historical episodes — notably 2018–2019 and the COVID-19 selloff in 2020 — show that companies with durable subscription revenue and strong retention rebounded faster.

Q: What indicators would signal the start of a durable recovery in tech multiples? A: Leading indicators include a consistent reversal in consensus earnings revisions (from negative to neutral/positive), sequential improvement in enterprise IT spending surveys, and a switch in fund flows from growth-tilt ETFs to broader and active strategies. A material drop in real policy rates would also be a catalyst for multiple re-expansion.

Q: Are there historical precedents for the current dislocation? A: Yes. The multiple compression in 2018 and parts of 2022 exhibited similar characteristics: high-multiple growth names led the selloff while cash-rich platforms were more resilient. The recovery outcomes varied by business model — subscription-based and platform companies recovered more quickly than early-stage, discretionary-revenue firms. For further context, see our perspectives on [technology valuations](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).

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