The Palm Beach Post

How diversifie­d is the S&P 500 Index?

- Keith Singer, JD CFP Keith Singer is an attorney and Certified Financial Planner and he offers Advisory Services through Singer Wealth Advisors, a Florida Advisory firm.

The S&P 500 consists of 500 of the country’s largest publicly traded companies. These companies include the following sectors: energy, technology, consumer staples, consumer discretion­ary, financials, health care, industrial, materials, telecommun­ication, utilities and real estate. At first glance, this seems like adequate diversific­ation. However, the S&P 500 is market cap weighted, which means that the larger companies make up a bigger percentage of the index than the smaller companies.

Technology companies currently make up about 25 percent of the entire index and the largest five tech stocks (Apple, Microsoft, Google Amazon and Facebook) accounted for 14.4 percent of the entire index as of the end of February 2018.

Since the beginning of 2015, the technology sector has returned 18 percent per year vs.

10.2 percent for the

S&P 500 as a whole. This recent outperform­ance has contribute­d to the tech sector’s overweight in the index. What does this mean for the

S&P 500? It means that if technology stocks continue outperform, then that bodes well for the S&P 500. However, if the sector falls out of favor, the S&P 500 will likely underperfo­rm.

If you own the S&P 500 index or an actively managed large cap mutual fund, which on average consists of 30.3 percent technology, then you are essentiall­y making an oversize bet on the technology sector.

If you would prefer to be a more diversifie­d investor rather than an unwitting sector bettor, there are some viable alternativ­es. For instance, the Guggenheim S&P

500 equal weight index allows investors to own an equal share of all 500 stocks with quarterly rebalancin­g. For value investors, the Barclay’s Shiller Cape Index allows investors to own only the cheapest sectors of the S&P 500. This index has significan­tly performed the S&P 500 as a whole over the last five years with significan­tly less volatility.

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