The Guardian (USA)

The stock market story of 2023? The growing domination of US tech

- Nils Pratley

In the old days, there were the FAANGs, the five big US tech stocks that dominated the investment landscape – Facebook (now Meta), Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google (now Alphabet). That picture is now out of date. Say hello instead to what is variously called the Super Seven or the Magnificen­t Seven – four of the above (the dropout being Netflix) plus Microsoft, Tesla and the chip-maker Nvidia. This group’s domination is the stock market story of 2023.

The chart below is “one for the ages”, says Duncan Lamont, the head of strategic research at the fund manager Schroders. It shows how, even if you invest via one of the broadest and most widely used “global” stock market indices, you will end up with a portfolio that is very American and very skewed towards US tech.

The index is the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI), which covers approximat­ely 85% of “the global investable equity opportunit­y”, as the compilers put it, by measuring almost 3,000 large and mid-sized companies in 23 developed markets and 24 emerging ones. The bigger a company becomes in value, the greater its weighting in the index.

The seven are now so big that they account for 17.2% of the whole thing, while the combined representa­tives of Japan, the UK, China, France and Canada contribute 17.3%. Seven US companies equals five countries. “This is far from diversifie­d exposure,” says Lamont. Apple alone, with a market value of $3tn, is bigger than the entire UK stock market.

The numbers have become so astonishin­g, in part, because of what is shown in the second chart. Up to last week, the group of seven has risen in value by 74% in 2023. The rest of the world’s equities, within the same ACWI index, have managed 12%. If your portfolio did not include the Magnificen­t Seven in 2023, it was hard to keep up.

Is this degree of concentrat­ion healthy? It’s certainly unpreceden­ted. Thanks to the whoosh from the seven during 2023, US stocks now account for 63% of the supposedly global ACWI. Even in the go-go days of the Japanese economic miracle, the country accounted for only 44% of the same index. “The US has far exceeded the level of concentrat­ion of Japan in the 1980s, which everyone thought was extreme at the time,” says Lamont.

Yet it would be hard to argue that the rise of the seven has been fuelled by the type of wild speculatio­n that created the turn-of-the-century dotcom bubble. The 240% rise in Nvidia’s stock price this year may or may not be overdone, but it’s undeniable that the company’s order book for computer chips is booming as the artificial intelligen­ce (AI) revolution arrives.

It would also be wrong to think of the seven as entirely alike. All have leading positions in growing markets and Amazon, Google and Microsoft have big cloud services divisions. But Amazon’s retail division has little in common with Google’s search business and Microsoft’s core software business is different again. All may benefit from

 ?? ?? Netflix has dropped out of the five-strong group known as FAANGS. A new group is now dominant, the Magnificen­t Seven, incorporat­ing: Alphabet (Google), Meta (Facebook), Apple, Amazon, plus Microsoft, Tesla and Nvidia. Photograph: various
Netflix has dropped out of the five-strong group known as FAANGS. A new group is now dominant, the Magnificen­t Seven, incorporat­ing: Alphabet (Google), Meta (Facebook), Apple, Amazon, plus Microsoft, Tesla and Nvidia. Photograph: various

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