Nvidia's stunning gains increasingly power Wall Street's record run
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[June 06, 2024] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A rally that has propelled U.S. equities to record
highs increasingly rests on red-hot chipmaker Nvidia and a handful of
other giant stocks, reviving concerns that the market’s performance has
become tied to a cluster of companies.
About 60% of the S&P 500’s total return of more than 12% for the year
has been driven by five companies whose shares have some of the heaviest
weightings in the index: Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Alphabet and
Amazon.com, data from S&P Dow Jones Indices showed.
Nvidia - which on Wednesday became the world’s second-most valuable
company following a 147% run this year - has alone accounted for about a
third of the index’s gain.
As the companies’ share prices have rallied, their weightings in the S&P
500 have grown, giving them more sway over the broader index. The top
four stocks - Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia and Alphabet - accounted for
nearly 24% of the S&P 500 at the end of May, the biggest collective
weight for four stocks in 60 years, according to Bianco Research.
Many investors believe the companies’ market heft is deserved, given
their robust earnings, dominant competitive positions and expectation
they will capitalize on advances in the burgeoning
artificial-intelligence field. But some are concerned the concentration
of gains in a handful of powerhouses could threaten indexes if some of
the big names start to wobble.
"If these names stop performing well ... and we don't see the rest of
the market providing that support, that could potentially be a source of
vulnerability," said Angelo Kourkafas, senior investment strategist at
Edward Jones.
A look at the ten largest stocks in the S&P 500, meanwhile, shows their
weighting ballooned to 34.1% at the end of May, the highest-ever
month-end weight for the index’s top ten, said Howard Silverblatt,
senior index analyst at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Concerns over market concentration have arisen repeatedly in recent
years. The S&P 500's 24% gain in 2023 - when recession worries attracted
investors to larger companies that are less exposed to the economy's
fluctuations - was propelled by eye-popping increases from a group of
megacap tech and growth stocks dubbed the "Magnificent Seven." While
those stocks soared, large swaths of the market remained tepid, even
though a recession did not come to pass.
Signs of broadening emerged in the first quarter of 2024, when the
financials, energy and industrials sectors all outperformed the S&P 500.
Those groups have declined in the second quarter, however, even as the
broad index has pushed higher.
The equal-weight S&P 500 - a proxy for the average stock in the index -
has pared earlier gains and is up just 4.5% this year, compared with a
12% gain for the S&P 500.
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A NVIDIA logo is shown at SIGGRAPH 2017 in Los Angeles, California,
U.S. July 31, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
"We were all excited about the broadening out of the recovery," said
Jack Manley, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset
Management. "It appears to have stalled out, at least in the first
half or so of the year."
Analysts cite a number of reasons for the market's narrowing,
including first-quarter earnings dominance from megacap tech
companies and enthusiasm for companies benefiting from AI. Nascent
worries over an economic downshift - reflected in recent data such
as a weaker U.S. manufacturing report - could be another factor.
Meanwhile, Nvidia has kept ascending. Fueled by its position as the
dominant AI chipmaker, Nvidia's market value on Wednesday surpassed
$3 trillion as the company moved ahead of Apple in market
capitalization, trailing only Microsoft.
The stock has gained 29% since its blockbuster earnings report on
May 22, while the S&P 500 is up 0.9% in that time. "Nvidia itself
was supporting the tape," said Michael O'Rourke, chief market
strategist at JonesTrading. "That's a risk because if a correction
emerges in that name ... you're going to feel it in the market."
Some investors believe the concentration simply reflects the
companies’ economic strength and is not in itself a cause for alarm.
The megacaps "are outperforming because the results and outlook are
strong," said Peter Tuz, president of Chase Investment Counsel,
although he added that gains from a wider group of stocks are often
preferable as this reflects broader economic strength.
Others are optimistic the market will broaden again in coming
months, helped by improving earnings from the rest of the S&P 500.
Magnificent Seven earnings are expected to rise about 27% in 2024,
against a 7.4% increase for the S&P 500 excluding those seven, with
the gap shrinking as the year goes on, according to Tajinder Dhillon,
senior research analyst at LSEG.
"That earnings outperformance gap will start to narrow," Edward
Jones' Kourkafas said. "Investors shouldn't give up on that theme of
broadening leadership this year."
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Editing by Ira
Iosebashvili and Matthew Lewis)
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