Fifty corporate winners from the coronavirus pandemic have lost roughly $1.5tn in market value since the end of 2020, as investors turn their backs on many of the stocks that rocketed during early lockdowns.

According to data from S&P Global, technology groups dominate the list of the 50 companies with a market value of more than $10bn that made the biggest percentage gains in 2020.

But these early-pandemic winners have collectively shed more than a third of their total market value, the equivalent of $1.5tn, since the end of 2020, Financial Times calculations based on Bloomberg data found.

Video-conferencing company Zoom, whose shares soared as much as 765 per cent in 2020 as businesses switched to remote working, has been one of the biggest losers. Its stock has fallen about 80 per cent, equivalent to more than a $77bn drop in market value, since the end of that year.

Cloud-based communications company RingCentral also surged in the remote working boom of 2020 but has since shed about 90 per cent of its value, as it competes with technology giants such as Alphabet and Microsoft.

Exercise bike maker Peloton has been another big loser, with shares down more than 97 per cent since the end of 2020, equivalent to about a $43bn loss of market value.

Peloton on Thursday said chief executive Barry McCarthy would step down and it would cut 15 per cent of its workforce, the latest in a series of cost-saving measures.

The losses come as the sharp acceleration of trends such as videoconferencing and online shopping driven by the lockdowns has proven less durable than expected, as more workers migrate back to the office and high interest rates and living costs hit ecommerce demand.

“Some companies probably thought that shock was going to be permanent,” said Steven Blitz, chief US economist at TS Lombard. “Now they’re getting a painful bounceback from that.”

In percentage terms, Tesla was the biggest winner of 2020. The electric-car maker’s market value jumped 787 per cent to $669bn by the end of that December, but has since slipped back to $589bn.

Line chart of Peloton Interactive market value ($mn) showing Peloton plunged in value as lockdowns eased

Singapore-based internet company Sea came in second, as its market value jumped from $19bn to $102bn following a pandemic-era surge for all three of its core businesses: gaming, ecommerce and digital payments. But the company has since lost more than 60 per cent of its end-2020 value amid fears of a slowdown in growth.

Ecommerce groups Shopify, JD.com and Chewy, which initially thrived as online spending ballooned, have also suffered big losses.

Vaccine hopes and demand for medical treatments also buoyed pharmaceutical groups such as Moderna and Pfizer in 2020, as well as lesser-known Chinese groups, including WuXi Biologics, Chongqing Zhifei Biological Products and Alibaba Health Information Technology.

Many vaccine makers’ pandemic-era gains have reversed, however, as investors become concerned about unpredictable demand for the shots. Pfizer has now completely erased its gains from 2020 and 2021, despite co-developing a widely used vaccine alongside German biotechnology company BioNTech.

Just seven of the 50 biggest corporate winners of 2020 have gained market value: Chinese carmaker BYD, cyber security group CrowdStrike, software companies The Trade Desk and Datadog, T-Mobile, Chinese technology company CATL and Latin American online marketplace Mercado Libre.

However, other companies that made gains during the pandemic have gone on to fare even better, including technology giants Nvidia and Amazon, which ranked 54th and 100th, respectively, among the best performers of 2020. Nvidia has added more than $1.9tn in market value since the end of 2020, thanks to the boom in artificial intelligence-linked stocks.

2020’s biggest corporate winners (by gain in market value)
NameChange in 2020 (%)Change since 2020 (%)Current Market Cap ($bn)CountrySector
Tesla787.1-11.9589.2USAutos
Sea Group446.1-63.237.5SingaporeTechnology
Zoom Video413.0-80.319.0USTechnology
Pinduoduo397.4-11.9192.5ChinaEcommerce
BYD359.213.788.7ChinaAutos
CrowdStrike357.264.977.3USTechnology
Shanxi Xinghuacun Fen Wine Factory346.3-9.245.5ChinaBeverages
Longi Green Energy Technology296.1-63.519.5ChinaEnergy
Pinterest291.4-30.628.3USTechnology
Twilio287.7-76.311.2USTechnology
CATL271.30.8126.3ChinaAutos
Square265.1-53.845.4USPayments
China Tourism Group Duty Free238.8-74.321.7ChinaConsumer
WuXi Biologics230.4-85.08.1ChinaHealthcare
Snap226.3-63.027.6USTechnology
Xiaomi Corporation224.4-46.457.8ChinaTechnology
Chewy220.9-81.36.9USEcommerce
The Trade Desk220.818.744.7USTechnology
Chongqing Zhifei Biological Products217.7-66.112.3ChinaHealthcare
JD.com215.2-63.650.1ChinaEcommerce
DocuSign211.8-70.512.2USTechnology
M3211.0-88.67.3JapanTechnology
Shopify199.4-27.999.6CanadaEcommerce
Meituan194.3-57.196.0ChinaEcommerce
Mercado Libre193.30.683.8UruguayEcommerce
Adyen187.6-44.239.4NetherlandsPayments
Alibaba Health Information Technology185.9-83.56.5ChinaHealthcare
Luzhou Laojiao182.7-44.022.2ChinaConsumer
Kakao178.4-22.139.5South KoreaTechnology
Samsung SDI176.6-48.916.2South KoreaTechnology
LG Chem175.8-60.721.0South KoreaChemicals
East Money Information169.0-29.129.0ChinaFinancial Services
Aier Eye Hospital Group168.7-63.517.3ChinaHealthcare
Datadog168.240.642.1USTechnology
Kingsoft167.5-30.920.0ChinaTechnology
Roku166.5-79.48.7USTechnology
SF Holding161.2-59.125.2ChinaLogistics
Rongsheng Petrochemical155.1-43.216.2ChinaIndustrials
Shenzhen Mindray Bio-Medical Electronics149.8-33.652.7ChinaHealthcare
T-Mobile US149.513.7190.3USTelecoms
Fortescue Metals Group140.0-3.253.7AustraliaMining
Vestas Wind Systems139.0-44.826.5DenmarkEnergy
Foshan Haitian Flavouring and Food138.8-69.330.6ChinaConsumer
EDP Renewables136.4-39.614.7SpainEnergy
Okta135.4-49.516.6USTechnology
RingCentral134.3-91.82.8USTechnology
StoneCo134.2-80.05.2BrazilPayments
Wuliangye Yibin134.1-51.983.5ChinaConsumer
BeiGene132.1-24.517.7ChinaHealthcare
Siemens Gamesa130.4DelistedDelistedSpainEnergy
Source: Bloomberg. Calculated in US$. Data to Monday May 6, 2024.

Additional reporting by Ray Douglas in London

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