Megacap stocks keep lifting US market, but worries over their dominance
grow
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[January 31, 2024] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Earnings reports this week from five of the
so-called Magnificent Seven stocks are putting a renewed focus on risks
from the group’s outsize weighting in the S&P 500, while their
collective strength continues pushing U.S. equities to record highs.
Last year, eye-popping gains for the huge tech and growth stocks
accounted for the bulk of the S&P 500's 24% rise, with the hefty market
values of the seven making them a driving force in the
market-cap-weighted index. Their performance has already helped drive
the S&P 500 up over 3% this year.
But concerns have grown that the companies' huge influence can work both
ways, dragging down the broader indexes if they falter.
Analysts at JPMorgan said on Tuesday the market’s narrow leadership was
becoming “increasingly unhealthy,” with the Magnificent Seven --
Alphabet, Amazon.com, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla --
accounting for nearly 29% of the S&P 500.
Should the Magnificent Seven stocks weaken, they are “going to have a
serious impact on the indices because of the high weight they have,”
said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak. “Any
meaningful pullback in tech is going to knock down the major averages
and scare a lot of investors.”
The Nasdaq Composite Index is also market-cap-weighted, while the
30-component Dow Jones Industrial Average is price-weighted. Of the
Magnificent Seven, only Apple and Microsoft are part of the Dow Jones.
The current earnings season is poised to be a test of whether the
megacap companies can live up to investors' lofty expectations.
Microsoft, whose market value recently topped $3 trillion, beat
estimates for quarterly revenue on Tuesday, as new AI features helped
attract customers to its cloud and Windows services. In its report on
Tuesday, Google parent Alphabet disappointed Wall Street as holiday
season advertising sales came in below expectations.
Their shares are both up over 8% this year, as of Tuesday's close.
Shares of Nvidia are up about 27% this year and Meta Platforms has
gained 13%. Tesla shares, on the other hand, are down 20% so far in
2024, tumbling last week after CEO Elon Musk warned that sales growth
would slow this year.
The Magnificent Seven now represent 28.6% of the S&P 500, up from 27.8%
at the end of 2023, and close to the highest weight ever for that group
of stocks, according to LSEG Datastream data.
In 2023, the Magnificent Seven individually soared between around 50%
and 240%, and were collectively responsible for 62% of the S&P 500's
total return.
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CHALLENGE FOR ACTIVE MANAGERS
While that kind of performance has thrilled many investors, it has
presented a more challenging environment for active fund managers,
who seek to beat gauges such as the S&P 500 or Russell 1000 because
many have held allocations to the Magnificent Seven that are smaller
relative to the stocks' weighting in those indexes.
Only 23% of large-cap funds that benchmark against the Russell 1000
beat the index last year, according to JPMorgan data.
Fund managers may hold less of the stocks for a variety of reasons,
including a desire for portfolio flexibility, worries over owning
too much of any one position and limitations imposed by the rules of
their own funds.
"In an environment like this, diversified funds will struggle," said
Chuck Carlson, chief executive at Horizon Investment Services. "When
you have just a few companies that are leading the way, managers
can’t own those companies in enough bulk to offset that
concentration of performance at the top."
Indeed, the S&P 500 beat the equal-weight S&P 500, a proxy for the
average stock in the index, by 12 percentage points last year. The
equal weight index is trailing again so far in 2024, up just 0.4%.
In a note on Tuesday, BofA Global Research said the Magnificent
Seven now account for almost 20% of the market cap of the MSCI's
world equities index, with Apple and Microsoft each nearly the size
of Japan, the second-largest country in the index.
The bank’s clients are worried about Magnificent Seven concentration
and "that actives will only get more squeezed in to keep up with
benchmarks/peers, further fuelling upside momentum," the firm's
analysts said.
The stocks could see more volatility later this week, when Apple,
Amazon and Meta report quarterly results. To be sure, stellar
reports could further invigorate the stocks and drive indexes
higher.
“The fact that the market is very concentrated in them does worry
me," said Peter Tuz, president of Chase Investment Counsel, which
owns the Magnificent Seven stocks except for Tesla. "Mitigating
against that is for the most part these are exceptionally strong
companies that dominate their niches."
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Leslie Adler)
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