Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Big Tech’s Market Dominance Stirs Debate on Concentration Risks

Apple held the crown of the world’s most valuable company for much of the past decade.
Apple held the crown of the world’s most valuable company for much of the past decade.

The unprecedented level of concentration in a handful of tech stocks provokes strong feelings on Wall Street.

Some investors fear the top-heaviness means the bull run is on quicksand, and will sink the minute an AI-frenzy-fueled Nvidia Corp. or Microsoft Corp. stumbles. The dominance also leads to portfolio risks, with diversification suffering. For others, the worries are overblown, gains have historically been powered by a small group of megacaps, and this is simply tech’s latest time to shine.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The debate is becoming more urgent as Nividia, Microsoft, Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc. account for more than 30% of the benchmark index, more than three times their weighting from a decade ago. Gains for Nividia, Microsoft and Meta alone account for about 270 points of the S&P 500’s 579-point advance in 2025, or nearly half of this year’s 9.8% rally.

For Scott Chronert, Citi Research’s managing director, the concentration is a badge of honor, well-deserved for a group that continues to deliver unparalleled growth in sales and earnings. The five biggest — Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Alphabet and Amazon — increased profits by 26% in the second quarter, compared with estimates for 15%, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. The S&P 500 as a whole saw earnings rise by 11% from a year ago.

The biggest tech companies have “earned” their weightings as a function of growth metrics, Chronert said. To him, valuations aren’t stretched based on the profit forecasts that they have consistently been able to meet. On a price/earnings to growth basis, no cause for alarm exists, he said.

“The PEG ratio for the Mag 7 is not materially different than for the rest of the market,” Chronert said. Valuation isn’t an issue, he adds, “so long as earnings growth expectations are met or beat” — a bar he conceded could be getting harder to surpass as targets swell.

Still, there are reasons why the tech megacap domination is likely to persist without incident. They generate vast amount of cash in good economic times and bad, making them growth and defensive plays at the same time. They also stand to get outsize benefits from recent Trump administration policy changes, including carve outs from some of the more punitive trade policies.

Source link

Hot this week

Topics

spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img