Market Madness: The 'Elite 8' Are Becoming a Liability

At this point, most investors should be keenly aware of the outsized importance of a select group of stocks for the S&P 500. While the acronyms have changed, the current iteration is an amalgamation of giant market-leading companies taking part in the prevailing “AI” revolution. We’ll call them the “Elite 8” perhaps an apt comparison for this year's March Madness tournament which has seen the favorites dominate the tournament. If you exclude Berkshire Hathaway, the elite 8 are the 8 largest US companies by market cap.¹

Recently, AssetMark published a piece urging investors to diversify in the face of this highly concentrated stock market,² highlighting the historic levels of concentration with the below chart:

Market Concentration Peaks

Perhaps unsurprisingly, concentration peaks are generally coincidental with market index peaks. Concentration is likely a key ingredient of market cycles and as concentration builds, the select group of concentrated stocks increasingly become the market.

Over the past 5 years³ the “Elite 8” have increased their weight from 19% to 32.5% (and a peak of over 35%) and they have accounted for roughly 2/3rds of the entire return in the S&P 500. Thus far the market cap “let it ride” nature of the S&P 500 has been to the benefit of its investors, allowing the largest companies to continue to appreciate, but it has also allowed these companies to represent an outsized risk to portfolios going forward.

The Elite 8 are both volatile and highly correlated with one another, and increasingly so as the AI theme continues to bind their fates. Over the past year the average Elite 8 stock has exhibited a startlingly high 0.7 correlation with one another, higher still during the recent market pullback.⁴ This means these individual stocks are often more closely related to one another than they are to the rest of their “sector” and far more correlated than the average S&P 500 sector is with one another. There is little diversification benefit within this group AND the group is a large part of the overall index, therefore the combined effect is a very outsized impact on contribution to market risk over time.

Elite 8 share of SP500 volatility over time

Source: Bloomberg data 12/31/2019 through 3/31/2025, “Elite 8” index created by Algorithmic investment models do derive trailing 30-day volatility.