World / Business

Apple loses position as most valuable firm amid tech sell-off

18:39 pm on 12 May 2022

Apple has lost its position as the world's most valuable company amid a broad sell-off of technology stocks.

Photo: AFP

Saudi Arabian oil and gas producer Aramco has reclaimed the top spot from the iPhone maker for the first time in almost two years.

Investors have been selling shares in technology firms as they move into what they see as less risky assets.

Bitcoin, other major cryptocurrencies and digital assets have also continued to fall sharply.

Shares in Apple fell by more than 5 percent in New York on Wednesday to end the trading day with a stock market valuation of US$2.37tn (NZ$3.6tn).

That meant it lost its position as the most valuable company in the world to oil and gas producer Aramco, which was valued at US$2.42tn (NZ$3.8tn).

It is the first time that Aramco has held the top spot since 2020. Shares in energy producers have risen this year as the cost of crude oil and natural gas have gone up.

Meanwhile Apple's shares have fallen by almost 20 percent since the start of the year after a sell-off in technology stocks.

The technology-heavy Nasdaq closed 3.2 percent lower in New York on Wednesday after official data showed that US inflation remained near a more than 40-year high.

Rising prices have been the single biggest threat to the recovery of the global economy as it emerges from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Central banks around the world have responded to the problem by raising interest rates, which has triggered a move out of riskier investments over concerns that the higher cost of borrowing will slow down economic growth.

The move out of what are seen as risky assets also helped to push the price of Bitcoin below $27,000 (NZ$43,160).

The world's biggest and best-known cryptocurrency has now lost about 60 percent of its value since hitting a record high in November last year.

Ether, the digital coin linked to the ethereum blockchain network, also fell sharply again and has now lost around a third of its value in the last week.

- BBC