Navigating the Unusual Twist in S&P 500 Factor Correlation

In a notable shift for the start of 2026, the S&P 500 is experiencing a divergence in factor performance. Typically, high beta (aggressive, high-risk) and low volatility (defensive, safe-haven) factors sit on opposite sides of the seesaw. When one goes up, the other usually comes down.

However, as of late February 2026, both the Invesco S&P 500 Momentum ETF (SPMO) — which currently overlaps heavily with high beta — and the Invesco S&P 500 Low Volatility ETF (SPLV) are outperforming the broad benchmark, the iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV).

SPMO and the “Winner-Takes-All” AI Cycle

The outperformance of high beta (captured by SPMO’s current basket) is a continuation of the AI Supercycle that dominated 2025. While the broader S&P 500 felt the sting of a 1.4% dip in February, the top-tier momentum names — predominantly NVIDIA, Broadcom, and Meta — have remained resilient. These companies aren’t just trading on hype; they are delivering the 13–15% earnings growth that investors are desperate for in a “sticky inflation” environment.

Interestingly, because the S&P 500 has become so concentrated in tech, the index itself now behaves like a high beta vehicle. SPMO simply supercharges this effect by weeding out the 400+ laggards that are weighing down the parent index.