HomeNewsBusinessMarketsIs the US-stock market concentration too much or justifiable? Michael Mauboussin answers

Is the US-stock market concentration too much or justifiable? Michael Mauboussin answers

The authors of the latest note from Morgan Stanley's Consilient Research finds answers that may not be comforting to active fund managers.

June 05, 2024 / 16:46 IST
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They acknowledged that the rising stock-market concentration does make it challenging for these managers because, on average, they own stocks with smaller market caps than those in their benchmarks.
They acknowledged that the rising stock-market concentration does make it challenging for these managers because, on average, they own stocks with smaller market caps than those in their benchmarks.

Dominance of a few companies -or concentration - in the US stock market indices has been rising, and causing market participants to worry about a possible bubble.  Active fund managers are agonising over the difficulty of beating the benchmark.

This raises a question--does concentration seem higher only in relation to earlier stock-market concentration levels, which were lower because they were mispriced, and whether the concentration is justified by the fundamentals.

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Also read: MC Explains: Why does Michael Mauboussin say that share buybacks are not always good for investors

To both, the answers are in the affirmative. "Investors have to deal with the world as it is rather than how they wish it to be," says the latest note from Michael Mauboussin, Head of Consilient Research for Counterpoint Global, Morgan Stanley Investment Management, and his colleague, Dan Callahan,  a member of Consilient Research.