Skip to main content
JP Morgan Asset Management - Home
Financial Professional Login
Log in
  • My Collections
    View saved content and presentation slides
  • Logout
  • Products
    Overview

    Products

    • Mutual Funds
    • ETFs
    • SmartRetirement Funds
    • 529 Portfolios
    • Alternatives
    • Separately Managed Accounts
    • Money Market Funds
    • Commingled Funds
    • Featured Funds

    Asset Class Capabilities

    • Fixed Income
    • Equity
    • Multi-Asset Solutions
    • Alternatives
    • Global Liquidity
  • Investment Strategies
    Overview

    Tax Capabilities

    • Tax Active Solutions
    • Tax-Smart Platform
    • Tax Insights
    • Tax Information

    Investment Approach

    • ETF Investing
    • Model Portfolios
    • Separately Managed Accounts
    • Sustainable Investing
    • Commingled Pension Trust Funds

    Education Savings

    • 529 Plan Solutions
    • College Planning Essentials

    Defined Contribution

    • Retirement Plan Solutions
    • Target Date Strategies
    • Retirement Income
    • Startup and Micro 401(k) Plan Solutions
    • Small to Mid-market 401(k) Plan Solutions

    Annuities

    • Annuity Essentials
  • Insights
    Overview

    Market Insights

    • Market Insights Overview
    • Guide to the Markets
    • Quarterly Economic & Market Update
    • Guide to Alternatives
    • Market Updates
    • On the Minds of Investors
    • Principles for Successful Long-Term Investing
    • Weekly Market Recap

    Portfolio Insights

    • Portfolio Insights Overview
    • Asset Class Views
    • Taxes
    • Equity
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Long-Term Capital Market Assumptions
    • Multi-Asset Solutions Strategy Report
    • Strategic Investment Advisory Group

    Retirement Insights

    • Retirement Insights Overview
    • Guide to Retirement
    • Principles for a Successful Retirement
    • Retirement Hot Topics
    • Social Security and Medicare Hub

    ETF Insights

    • ETF Insights Overview
    • Guide to ETFs
    • Monthly Active ETF Monitor
  • Tools
    Overview

    Portfolio Construction

    • Portfolio Construction Tools Overview
    • Portfolio Analysis
    • Model Portfolios
    • Investment Comparison
    • Heatmap Analysis
    • Bond Ladder Illustrator

    Defined Contribution

    • Retirement Plan Tools & Resources Overview
    • Target Date Compass®
    • Heatmap Analysis
    • Core Menu Evaluator℠
    • Price Smart℠
  • Resources
    Overview
    • Account Service Forms
    • Tax Information
    • News & Fund Announcements
    • Insights App
    • Webcasts
    • Continuing Education Opportunities
    • Library
    • Market Response Center
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Podcasts
  • About Us
    Overview
    • Diversity, Opportunity & Inclusion
    • Spectrum: Our Investment Platform
    • Media Resources
    • Our Leadership Team
    • Our Commitment to Research
  • Contact Us
  • Role
  • Country
DST Vision
Shareholder Login
  • My Collections
    View saved content and presentation slides
  • Logout
Financial Professional Login
Search
Menu
Search
You are about to leave the site Close
J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s website and/or mobile terms, privacy and security policies don't apply to the site or app you're about to visit. Please review its terms, privacy and security policies to see how they apply to you. J.P. Morgan Asset Management isn’t responsible for (and doesn't provide) any products, services or content at this third-party site or app, except for products and services that explicitly carry the J.P. Morgan Asset Management name.
CONTINUE Go Back

The mega-cap tech companies remain at the forefront of innovation, but they are not a monolith and remain highly exposed to global policy shocks.

Over the past two years, a small group of mega-cap tech stocks hasn’t just led—they’ve defined the market. The Magnificent Seven became the center of gravity for performance, sentiment and allocation. But in 2025, that gravitational pull is becoming a point of vulnerability. Doubts around the durability of the AI capex cycle—particularly in the wake of DeepSeek—splashed cold water on AI enthusiasm. And now, rising trade tensions are pressuring the global supply chains at the heart of their business models.

Caught in the crosshairs of a trade war

The Trump administration’s sweeping “Liberation Day” tariffs have sent shockwaves through global markets. While intended to level the playing field, these measures have placed significant pressure on America’s leading tech companies.

  • Up to 75% of the Mag 7’s suppliers are located overseas, particularly in East and Southeast Asia. Apple relies heavily on Chinese and Vietnamese facilities for iPhone assembly1, Nvidia and AMD depend on Taiwanese and Korean fabs for chip production and Tesla imports EV components from China—even for its U.S. production lines.
  • These companies don’t just build abroad, they sell there too. Apple, Microsoft, Google and others generate over half of their revenue overseas2.
  • Tariffs could squeeze margins and hamper innovation. Electronics, semiconductors, server infrastructure—all areas dominated by the Mag 7—are at the center of the new tariff lists. Capital expenditures may also slow, with steel, aluminum and copper tariffs increasing the cost of the data center buildout.
  • Foreign retaliation adds another layer of risk. The EU and China have weighed retaliation by targeting the massive U.S. services trade surplus—largely driven by U.S. tech companies3.

Markets recalibrate risk and earnings potential

So far, the pullback hasn’t been triggered by collapsing fundamentals, but a repricing of risk. Investors are reassessing margins, capex and earnings potential in a more uncertain environment, and valuation compression has followed. The forward P/E ratio for the Mag 7 has declined to ~22x from 31x at the start of the year, marking the cheapest levels since January 2023—before the AI investment theme even gained traction.

This may look like a bargain, but the next big test will be earnings. Economists have downgraded GDP expectations to 0-1% for 2025, and the pass-through of a weaker growth outlook has yet to materialize in 2025 earnings expectations4. The Q1 season will involve more cautious guidance from management teams, with analyst downgrades likely to follow.

Investor positioning: From all-in to rebalance

Market concentration, once a tailwind for performance, has become a liability in a more uncertain environment and a key driver of market rotation. The mega-cap tech companies remain at the forefront of innovation, but they are not a monolith and remain highly exposed to global policy shocks. For investors, the playbook isn’t to abandon the cohort, but to manage your exposure, protect portfolios against downside risk and keep an eye on where leadership is headed next—as beyond the trade headlines, AI advancement is rapidly progressing.

1 According to some tech analysts, an iPhone could cost $3,5000 if produced in the U.S.— triple the price.
2 Source: FactSet GeoRev.
3 According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, the U.S. had a services trade surplus of $280 billion in 2023, with digitally enabled services accounting for 64% of all U.S. services exports.
4 As of 4/7/25, Mag 7 FY 2025 earnings expectation had barely come down to 16.6% from 16.9% expected a month prior, as analysts await fresh guidance post-tariff developments to make significant revisions. 
09tk250904112222
  • Economy
  • US economy
  • U.S. Elections
  • Tariffs