A curious trend has emerged within one of the world’s major equity benchmarks: the S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX). And one that beckons attention from the passive investing world.
As passive or index investors should be well aware, their portfolios will change over time as the index changes. So it’s arguably a key development that the S&P 500 has become increasingly lopsided.
The chart below comes from the latest edition of the weekly macro themes report, and was part of a wider discussion on sectors in the S&P 500 (and how the bulk of returns are being driven by Financials – NYSEARCA:XLF and Technology NYSEARCA:XLK).
The chart:Â This chart shows the difference between the upper vs lower quartiles of sector weights… i.e. the gap between the largest and smallest sectors of the S&P 500.
The chart shows both the market cap representation and the earnings representation. This is important to note as it’s not just a price phenomenon, it’s also an economic or earnings issue. But the bottom line is that sector inequality or the gap between the largest and smallest group of sectors has nearly tripled since the mid 1990’s.
What this means for passive investing…
For a passive investor which simply deploys capital based on market cap weights (which is what most index investors do – certainly for those investing in market cap weighted indexes), this means the portfolio they own now is materially different from the one back in the 90’s.
In fairness, over time this can be a good thing as the winners of longer term thematics and structural changes will grow in market cap, and industries in decline will invariably shrink over time, so there is some merit in it.
The risk comes when a sector or group of sectors generate an unsustainable majority in earnings and/or market cap weighting, which makes for a lopsided portfolio allocation. Indeed a market cap weighed approach basically seeks to allocate more to those sectors most at risk… just think about a market cap weighted portfolio at the peak of the dot com boom which would have had about 1/3 of its money in tech.
As the financials sector and technology sector (accounting for over 40% of market cap)Â drive the bulk of S&P 500 returns, this issue of index lopsidedness may become increasingly important for passive investors to be aware of.
Twitter:Â Â @Callum_Thomas
Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author, and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.