βMag 7β or MANGOS? SpaceX IPO sparks Wall Street debate
NEW YORK, June 14 β SpaceX roared into markets this past week with a valuation of more than US$2 trillion, surpassing two members of Wall Streetβs βMagnificent Sevenβ and raising a key question: Does the Mag 7 name still fit? βAnd if not, what should replace it?
The IPO, the biggest in US history, vaulted SpaceXβs value above two βMag 7 members: CEO Elon Muskβs other company, Tesla, and Meta Platforms. With trillion-dollar contenders such as OpenAI and Anthropic waiting in the IPO wings, the club may soon need a name change, analysts said.
With SpaceXβs arrival, βit becomes very hard to keep using Mag 7 as the clean shorthand βfor market leadership because one of the most important companies in the world would immediately be outside the label,β said Shay Boloor, chief market strategist at Futurum Equities.
These groupings are not formal market categories, but shorthand labels coined by strategists, investors and the media to capture the hottest big stocks at a given moment. Such monikers have a long history, ranging from the βNifty 50β of the 1960s and 1970s to the βFour Horsemenβ of the late 1990s dot-com boom. The SpaceX IPO has βset off a race to devise the next cool acronym.
One sobriquet gaining traction on X is βMANGOSβ, which stands for Meta, Anthropic, β Nvidia, Alphabet, OpenAI and SpaceX. That grouping is far from standardised, β with some interpreting the βAβ as Apple, currently the third most-valuable US-listed firm.
βWe are already referring β to it internally and the industry is picking β up on it as β well,β said Aga Kuplinska, SVP of product development at Tidal Financial Group, which helps asset managers roll out ETFs.
Dan Boardman-Weston, CEO at BRI Wealth Management, is going another way, suggesting βMagna Atomsβ β the Magnificent Seven plus SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic.
The Magnificent Seven ride
Β The βMagnificent Sevenβ term was β coined by BofA Global Research Chief Investment Strategist Michael Hartnett in late 2023 to describe seven heavyweight technology-related stocks: Nvidia, Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Tesla and Microsoft.
With an AI boom driving stock markets to record highs and the sudden appearance of new trillion-dollar companies, the leaderboard is often in a state of flux. In a May 22 note, BofA wrote about the βAI Big 10,β adding Broadcom, Micron Technology and Advanced Micro Devices to the original seven, reflecting the semiconductor rally of the past year. That group β accounts for more than 40% of the S&P 500βs weight, according to LSEG data.
The labels have evolved before β from FANG to FAANG to the Magnificent Seven β each tracking shifts in companies that led the market.
FANG covered Facebook, β Amazon, Netflix and Google. FAANG added Apple, and Magnificent Seven dropped Netflix while adding Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla, each shift reflecting changes at the β top of β the market.
βItβs been Mag 7 for several years now. Maybe the markets are excited for something new,β said Dustin Thackeray, chief investment officer at Crewe βAdvisors.
To be sure, not everyone expects the old label to ride off into βthe sunset.
βThe Magnificent Seven label is not going away,β βsaid Dave Mazza, CEO of Roundhill Investments. βIt is too embedded in how investors and the βmedia view large-cap tech leadership. What you will βlikely see is additive terminology rather than replacement.β β Reuters