When 8 Stocks Drive the Market, What Happens When They Fall?

A market built on AI and the “Magnificent 8”.

Over the past several years we’ve watched the S&P 500’s performance become increasingly tethered to a handful of Mega-cap technology companies. Most broad market indices are market-capitalization weighted, so when a few enormous firms surge – as they have during this ongoing Artificial Intelligence boom – they pull the entire index higher.

The chart below shows just how extreme the divergence has been. Over the past three years the market cap weighted S&P 500 (SPY) has returned roughly 70.9%, while the equal-weight S&P 500 (EQL) returned 49.4%. This sprawling gap underscores how much investors have been rewarded for crowding into the largest names.

Extreme divergence

Source: Bloomberg, AIM. Data for the period 6/30/2022 through 6/30/2025.

Complacency can be dangerous.

The S&P 500, by many measures, is now as concentrated as ever, meaning investors are effectively betting on a subset of eight (ish) businesses. This subset of companies, once relatively independent, are now all competing in AI, concentrating risk.

History shows that the companies that lead the market up tend to lead the market down. In the most recent three periods of concentration, it was:

  1. Tech bubble in 2000 with Software and Internet Infrastructure
  2. In 2008, it was Financials and Energy and
  3. Now we again have Tech and AI related companies making up a significant part of the index

Concentration in the S&P 500 rising again

Source: Apollo. The Daily Spark. “Extreme Concentration in the S&P 500”, 7/10/2025.