S&P 500 looks diversified but isn’t as AI superconcentration fuels a looming correction fear

More than $40 of every $100 sits in only 10 stocks
U.S. investors are increasingly worried about a major correction as AI supercharges market concentration and turns major benchmarks into directional bets. Morgan Stanley estimates the top 10 U.S. stocks account for 33% of overall value (37.5% of the MSCI USA index). RBC adds that in S&P 500 index funds, more than $40 of every $100 is effectively tied to just 10 companies, creating a “passive concentration trap.” The risk is a disorderly rout if mega-cap AI earnings and guidance disappoint—though AI doesn’t need to fail entirely.
- Top 10 U.S. stocks make up about 33% of market value
- They represent 37.5% of the MSCI USA index
- RBC warns S&P 500 index funds hold $40 of every $100 in 10 firms
- Top stocks in South Korea and Taiwan account for ~20% and ~40% of benchmarks
- Two firms alone drive about one-fifth of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index
- S&P 500 cap-weighted beats equal-weighted by over 30%
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
