The index’s top three stocks now account for 38% of its weighting, a concentration last seen before major bear markets in 1929, 1973, and 1999.
The S&P 500’s rally is increasingly driven by a handful of mega-cap tech stocks, with NVDA, GOOG, and META now comprising 38% of the index’s weighting. This narrow leadership mirrors patterns observed in July 1929, January 1973, and December 1999—each preceding significant market downturns.
Valuations have surged to historic levels, with the Shiller P/E ratio near its second-highest reading ever, surpassed only by November 1999. The AI-driven earnings growth underpinning these valuations may take years to materialize, raising concerns about sustainability.
Despite the S&P 500 hitting record highs and rising nearly 50% since April 2025, broader market weakness persists, with hundreds of components trading at 52-week lows. Corporate profits and low unemployment remain supportive, but concentration risks are growing.