Food for thought ...
As SD51555 explained to Native Hunter in post 4,082, anyone moving $ from tech stocks or tech-heavy mutual funds to an S&P 500 Index Fund to diversify away from over reliance on tech stocks may not be escaping the "tech-effect" as much as they think or prefer. Excerpts from a recent article regarding the influence of tech stocks on the 500 index suggest the wealth-creating possibilities of the tech sector may be influencing/forcing the 500 index to increase their exposure to tech stocks in order to achieve competitive returns. Be an informed investor; as they increase the role of tech stocks in the 500 ... the downside risk you may be hoping to avoid actually increases.
By ..... Lewis Braham
"Updated April 08, 2024, 11:21 am EDT / Original April 05, 2024, 2:30 am EDT
It’s safe to say John Bogle has won. The founder of Vanguard Group was mocked early in his career for believing that a low-cost index fund tracking the
S&P 500 would beat most active managers.
Almost 50 years after the
Vanguard 500 Index fund’s August 1976 launch, there are no doubts. Index fund assets for the first time ever in the U.S.
surpassed those of active funds in 2024’s first quarter. Just by itself, “Bogle’s folly”—as Vanguard’s original fund was nicknamed—has exceeded $1 trillion."
"But with that victory come risks. While Bogle,
who died in 2019, championed indexing, he also believed in diversification. That wasn’t an issue for the S&P 500 in the past, but the index has become a victim of its own success. Its largest stocks are now so popular they have come to dominate it, and they’re primarily in the technology sector—which
comprises 30% of the benchmark. The last time the index was so concentrated in tech occurred
before the dot-com bubble burst in 2000. Moreover,
three of the most highly valued companies in the so-called Magnificent Seven driving the market now— Amazon.com, Meta Platforms, and Alphabet —aren’t classified as tech by the S&P 500, but as consumer and communication stocks. The official tech weighting thus understates the sector’s impact, says Ben Inker, co-head of asset allocation at GMO: “The market is much more concentrated than anything we have experienced in over half a century now.”