Today’s Cap-Weighted Index Is an Identification Bet

Mark TennenbaumAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Most professionals already know the cap-weighted S&P 500 has disconnected from its equal-weighted fraternal twin, the S&P 500 Equal Weight Index, by the widest margin in fifty years. The gap is the result of an AI bet concentrated into a handful of names at a steep valuation. I have lived through this pattern twice before.

Start with what the consensus gets wrong: The index has grown dangerously concentrated, and equal weighting is the cure. However, the risk was never in owning a few names. It has always been in owning the particular few the market has crowned as winners, at maximum weight, on the unexamined bet that it crowned the right ones.

To be clear, the market has reliably crowned the wrong ones on prior occasions. The cap-weighted S&P 500 does not hold the eventual winners so much as presumed winners, at the largest possible weights. That is what makes it an identification bet rather than a breadth bet.

If the market has correctly named the companies that will dominate the AI era, cap weighting will look brilliant, because it owns them in size and will ride them up for free. If the market has misidentified even one or two of them, the cap-weighted index absorbs that loss at full weight, precisely where it is most concentrated. The real question is: How much do you want to bet the market chose the correct companies?