For growth investors, the conundrum is magnified. Technology stocks comprise nearly 50% of the Russell 1000 Growth Index today; technology and communications services companies combined account for more than 60% of that index.
What’s Different This Time?
Market concentration isn’t new. We’ve seen it before in different forms. At the end of the dot-com bubble in March 2000, technology stocks accounted for almost 50% of the Russell 1000 Growth and nearly a third of the S&P 500. Before the global financial crisis in 2008, financials made up about 40% of the MSCI World Value Index.
However, even when considering those episodes, it’s uncommon for such a small cohort of stocks to be such a disproportionately large weight of the index. For example, from September 1989 to July 2024, the 10 largest stocks in the S&P 500 averaged 21.2% of the index, compared to 34.4% today. So in recent decades, equity portfolios didn’t have to worry as much about how large underweights in individual stocks might affect returns.
Not anymore. Gone are the days when a portfolio manager could simply say, I don’t like the stock, so I won’t own it. Today, not owning a megacap like Apple or NVIDIA could create the biggest relative risk position in the portfolio, and as such, requires a commensurate level of conviction.
Investment Philosophy Matters
So how can an active portfolio manager justify taking that kind of risk? We think it all comes down to the investment philosophy that underpins a stockpicking process.
Clients purchase active portfolios based on its investing philosophy. For example, a growth portfolio might be rooted in a belief that profitable companies with reinvestment opportunities can unlock the power of compounding returns. A low-volatility equity portfolio could be based on a philosophy that sees quality companies as a way to help reduce downside risk but also participate substantially in rising markets.
These philosophies inform a stock selection process. Growth portfolios might target companies with high-quality features such as return on assets or consistency of earnings growth. Value-oriented portfolios won’t buy stocks with high price tags and should deploy clear criteria to identify catalysts that might prompt a stock’s rerating.
In a disciplined portfolio, all overweight and underweight positions should be rooted in the investment philosophy. Similarly, the philosophy and its execution should inform the patterns of performance and risk that investors expect from the portfolio.
Periodic Underperformance Is the Price of Admission
Sometimes, a strategy may miss out on an impactful market trend due to its philosophy, which can shake an investor’s conviction in the portfolio.
Consider the dot-com boom. In the late 1990s, when technology companies surged to lofty valuations, value equity portfolios underperformed. If a value portfolio bought pricey dot-com stocks just to keep up with the market, it would likely have been breaching the guidelines promised to investors. When the dot-com bubble burst, many value portfolios outperformed, as markets rewarded undervalued companies that were left out of the dotcom craze.
More recently, the energy crisis sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is another case in point. In 2022, energy stocks surged for several months as oil and gas prices spiked. Energy stocks are commonly held in value portfolios, but growth portfolios were left behind (Display). At the time, most growth investors would never have expected their portfolios to take large positions in the lower-growth, more cyclical energy sector. In other words, periodic underperformance is the price of admission for equity strategies with well-defined investment philosophies.