U.S Stock Market tips: Diversifying your investments but still stocks might be under great risk

Wall Street tips: What's happened is that a handful of companies, like Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet and Apple, have been driving stock returns. They, and a handful of other tech giants, including Amazon, Broadcom, Meta and Tesla, have become so val...

U.S Stock Market tips: Diversifying your investments but still stocks might be under great risk
Even if you have been doing everything right and diversifying your investments as the textbooks suggest, you may be taking greater risk than you realize.

What's happened is that a handful of companies, like Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet and Apple, have been driving stock returns. They, and a handful of other tech giants, including Amazon, Broadcom, Meta and Tesla, have become so valuable that their shares dwarf the rest of the market. That's well known and even applauded, because these gargantuan stocks, many of them spurred by investor enthusiasm for artificial intelligence, account for an outsize portion of the wealth that many people have gained in the market over the last three years.

But there's a downside that isn't as well understood. The market has become so highly concentrated that even the most comprehensive U.S. stock index funds are no longer well diversified. In fact, by a strict legal definition, they now are not diversified at all. If you believed that by buying an index fund that mirrored the entire stock market you were being protected by true diversification, it's time to reevaluate this crucial assumption.


Why Spreading Risk Matters



Simply by tracking the stock market, S&P 500 index funds contain several stocks that each account for more than 5 per cent of the index -- with Nvidia itself making up 7.8 per cent of the market on December 31, 2025, according to final data from Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst for S&P Dow Jones Indices, who retired this month.

Apple accounted for 6.9 per cent of the index, Microsoft for 6.2 per cent. And Alphabet, the holding company for Google, made up more than 5.6 per cent of the index, when you include both of its share classes. Combined, the total value of the four stocks was equal to more than 26 per cent of the S&P 500.
ADVERTISEMENT

5 per cent and 25 per cent

Vanguard began making changes in disclosures for its broadest U.S. stock index funds in 2024, said Michael W. Nolan, a Vanguard spokesperson. Five years earlier, the SEC had given index funds the authority to operate in a nondiversified way, as long as they disclosed that change to shareholders and if it happened solely because the market had itself become nondiversified. The issue arose in 2019 for funds tracking so-called "growth" indexes, which focus on rapidly expanding companies, many with a tech orientation. The rising stock market value of the big tech companies made these indexes extremely concentrated.

But now that concentration has become so acute that it has made broader market indexes nondiversified, too. As Vanguard puts it in the prospectus of its Vanguard 500 Stock Index Fund, investors now need to be aware of "nondiversification risk."

"Because the fund seeks to closely track the composition of the fund's target index," the prospectus says, "from time to time, more than 25 per cent of the fund's total assets may be invested in issuers representing more than 5 per cent of the fund's total assets due to an index rebalance or market movement, which would result in the fund being nondiversified under the Investment Company Act of 1940."
ADVERTISEMENT

There is a danger when a fund becomes that concentrated, Vanguard warned. "The fund's performance may be hurt disproportionately by the poor performance of relatively few stocks, or even a single stock, and the fund's shares may experience significant fluctuations in value," the prospectus said.

In other words, if the biggest trees fall, everyone will feel the forest shake.
ADVERTISEMENT

This isn't merely a problem for investors in S&P 500 funds, which is limited to the biggest stocks in the market. The issue goes far beyond that. The entire U.S. stock market is now nondiversified, using the classic definition. This is true whether you use the Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market to define the stock market, which is what Fidelity does with its Fidelity Total Stock Market Index Fund, or whether you measure the market with the CRSP US Total Market Index, as Vanguard does for its Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund.

The stock market itself may fix the nondiversification dilemma. The market will become diversified again if the biggest stocks decline more rapidly in value than the smaller stocks. But if you're holding broad, no-longer-diversified funds when the market corrects itself, you will be hurt.

Protect Yourself

So what does this mean for ordinary people? Simply put, for investors, I think it's inescapable that at least this respect, the overall U.S. stock market isn't as safe as it has been for more than 50 years.

But because the U.S. market has produced great returns over the long run, including in many, if not all, of those top-heavy decades, I believe it's still wise to invest in stocks and to use cheap, broad, low-cost index funds.

Bad times will return to the stock market, however, as they periodically do. For reducing risk, it's always been wise to also hold cash and bonds and to make sure that your stock and bond investments include broad international allocations as well. Now, given the concentration in the U.S. market, it's even more prudent to do so.

The rise of big tech stocks has been a wealth-building marvel, which may continue for years. Should the giants stumble and fall, broad diversification will be a balm. But it's hard to get it now by investing in the U.S. market alone.
Download
The Economic Times Business News App
for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
Download
The Economic Times News App
for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.
READ MORE
ADVERTISEMENT

READ MORE:

LOGIN & CLAIM

50 TIMESPOINTS

More from our Partners

Loading next story
Business News › News › International › US News › U.S Stock Market tips: Diversifying your investments but still stocks might be under great risk
Text Size:AAA
Success
This article has been saved

*

+