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The share of semiconductor stocks in the S&P 500 has truly reached a historic level. Currently, the sector accounts for nearly twenty percent of the index's total market capitalization, the highest ever seen. It's particularly striking that this share has quadrupled since June 2020, as such rapid growth in a sector's weighting within the index in a relatively short period of six years is unusual.
As a natural consequence, all other sectors combined make up just over eighty percent of the index, the lowest level ever. This means that an index like the S&P 500, which is expected to be broad-based, is becoming increasingly dependent on the performance of a single sector. This kind of concentration weakens the index's diversification advantage, as a sharp correction in the semiconductor sector could now shake not only that sector but the index as a whole.
There are similar signs of excess on the technical side as well. The semiconductor index is currently trading well above its two-hundred-day moving average, with some sources suggesting the difference is as high as fifty-seven percent, and other measurements indicating even higher levels. Such a deviation has only been seen a few times in the index's history since 1990, once in 1995 and again in 2000 during the peak of the dot-com bubble. Therefore, the current picture suggests the market is at a point comparable to at least two major historical periods of extreme volatility.
The story behind this rally is, of course, the explosion in demand for AI infrastructure. The sharp rise in chip stocks over the past few months has added hundreds of billions of dollars in additional market capitalization to the Nasdaq 100 index, with some individual stocks experiencing almost vertical movements. This naturally raises serious questions about sustainability.
Historically, such a significant divergence from its moving average doesn't always result in an immediate collapse, but it usually signals increased volatility and the risk of sharper pullbacks. The events following a similar divergence in 2000 are still fresh in people's memories; at that time, technology and chip stocks experienced a sharp correction. Therefore, some analysts are reading the current situation as a warning signal, especially given the high concentration within the index.
Of course, there's another side to the coin. Many argue that the demand for AI infrastructure is structural and not a temporary wave of speculation, and the recent quarterly earnings figures of some major chip companies support the idea that this demand is real, at least for now. So the issue is too complex to be reduced to simply a "bubble or not" question, but when the index concentration and technical excesses are considered together, increased volatility in the coming period would not be surprising. For those who follow both stock and crypto markets through Gate, this concentration risk in the semiconductor sector is a development that those holding positions tied to broader market indices should watch particularly closely.
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