The artificial intelligence boom pushes stock market concentration to historic proportions across major global financial indices.
In the U.S., the top ten stocks now command a staggering 33% of total market value.
The trend intensifies abroad, with TSMC representing 40% of Taiwan’s benchmark as investors bet heavily on hardware.
Samsung mirrors this dominance, accounting for 20% of South Korea’s index, highlighting a narrow path for growth.
Analysts warn that passive investors often face a concentration trap, with $40 of every $100 favoring ten firms.
While top-heavy structures historically boost annualized returns, they leave indices vulnerable to sudden, indiscriminate drawdowns.
Today’s market essentially functions as a directional bet on the continued revolutionary success of nascent AI technology.
Future stability relies on national champions like Intel, which recently saw its market cap triple to $600 billion.
Governments increasingly shield these giants to maintain a competitive technological edge against rival international markets.
