Investments Blog

Large and In Charge? Giant Firms atop Market Is Nothing New.

Written by Tra Sullivan | Jun 17, 2020 5:00:00 AM

 

A top-heavy stock market with the largest 10 stocks accounting for over 20% of market capitalization and a marquee technology firm perched at No. 1? This sounds like a description of the current US stock market, dominated by Apple and the other FAANG stocks,1 but it is actually a reference to 1967, when IBM represented a larger portion of the market than Apple at the end of 2019 (5.8% vs. 4.1%).

As we see in Exhibit 1, it is not particularly unusual for the market to be concentrated in a handful of stocks. The combined market capitalization weight of the 10 largest stocks, just over 20% at the end of last year, has been higher in the past.

EXHIBIT 1 Same Old Story

Weight of largest stocks by market capitalization in US stock market, 1927–2019
 
 
 

EXHIBIT 2 Big Board

Largest 10 US stocks at the start of each decade
 
 

EXHIBIT 3 Power Down

Annualized return in excess of market for stocks after joining list of 10 largest US stocks, 1927–2019
 

Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The only constant is change, and the more things change the more they stay the same. This seems an apt description of the dominant stocks atop the market. While the types of businesses most prominent in the market vary through time, the fact that a small subset of companies’ stocks account for an outsized portion of the stock market is not new. And it remains impossible to systematically predict which large companies will outperform the stock market and which will underperform it. This underscores the importance of having a broadly diversified equity portfolio that provides exposure to a vast array of companies and sectors.