indices

S&P 500 alternatives outperform as top-10 concentration hits 39.1% (SPX)

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Key Takeaway

With SPX top-10 concentration at 39.1% (down from 41.3% in October), narrowed and reweighted S&P 500 strategies have outperformed in 2026 by reducing mega-cap concentration risk.

Deep Dive: Why S&P 500 alternatives have outperformed so far in 2026

Last Updated: Feb. 26, 2026 at 11:15 a.m. ET

Several index funds and ETFs that narrow the S&P 500 (SPX) or apply alternative weighting schemes have outperformed the market-cap-weighted S&P 500 so far in 2026. The S&P 500 is market-cap weighted, which concentrates exposure in the largest companies. The index is now 39.1% concentrated in its largest 10 companies by market cap, down from 41.3% in October — the highest concentration level since at least 1972.

These concentration dynamics create a structural opportunity for strategies that change membership rules or reweight holdings.

Key fact

- The S&P 500 (SPX) concentration of the largest 10 companies: 39.1% (current) vs. 41.3% in October 2025; October marked the highest top-10 concentration since at least 1972.

What alternative index strategies do

Alternative S&P 500 strategies fall into two broad categories:

  • Narrowed subsets of the S&P 500
  • - Rules-based indices that select a subset of S&P 500 companies (for example, by profitability, balance-sheet strength, or valuation) while excluding the remainder.

  • Reweighted broad-market indices
  • - Indices that keep the S&P 500 universe but change weights (equal-weight, factor-tilt, low-volatility, quality, momentum, value) instead of pure market-cap weighting.

    Both approaches reduce the direct impact of the largest market-cap firms and can raise exposure to smaller but attractively priced or higher-quality constituents.

    Why these strategies have tended to outperform recently

    - Elevated top-10 concentration in SPX increases single-company risk. When a few names dominate performance, any rotation away from those names favors alternative weightings and narrower, non-cap-weighted selections.

    - Factor exposure alignment. Many alternative strategies naturally tilt to factors that outperformed in early 2026 (for example, value, momentum, or low-volatility), allowing them to capture returns not represented in a market-cap-weighted index.

    - Rebalancing mechanics. Equal-weight and systematic factor indices rebalance periodically, effectively buying laggards and selling recent winners, which can benefit returns during sector rotations.

    These mechanics are structural and not dependent on short-term market timing.

    Practical implications for institutional and professional investors

    - Risk management: Alternative indices can materially reduce single-stock and top-heavy sector risk when SPX concentration is near 40%.

    - Portfolio construction: Use alternative S&P exposures as a satellite allocation to complement a core market-cap allocation, rather than replacing cap-weighted exposure entirely.

    - Due diligence: Evaluate tracking error, turnover, tax efficiency, and expense ratios. Alternative weighting often increases turnover and tracking error relative to a standard S&P 500 fund.

    Implementation considerations

    - Expense ratios: Lower-cost alternative ETFs improve the tradeoff between active index exposure and fees. Compare expense ratios to expected incremental return from the strategy.

    - Turnover and tax impact: Frequent rebalancing can increase realized gains in taxable accounts. Consider implementing alternative exposures in tax-advantaged or institutional accounts to limit taxable distributions.

    - Liquidity and basket composition: Some narrowed-subset indices hold fewer names, which can increase single-issue liquidity risk in stressed markets.

    - Factor correlation: Understand which factors (value, momentum, quality, low-vol) a product emphasizes and how those factors historically correlate with market regimes important to your strategy.

    Risk checklist

    - Concentration risk shifts but does not eliminate company risk.

    - Higher turnover can increase transaction costs and tax burdens.

    - Different reconstitution rules may produce unintended sector tilts.

    - Short-term out- or under-performance versus SPX can occur if cap-weighted mega-cap names regain leadership.

    How to monitor effectiveness

    - Track relative performance vs. SPX over relevant horizons (3, 6, 12 months and full market cycles).

    - Monitor rolling return attribution by sector and factor exposures.

    - Watch turnover and realized capital gains in fund tax reports for taxable account suitability.

    Actionable guidelines for traders and allocators

    - If top-10 concentration in SPX remains near 40%, consider a tactical allocation (5–15%) to alternative S&P exposures to reduce single-name concentration risk.

    - For long-term strategic allocations, evaluate blended approaches: keep a cap-weighted core (to capture market beta) and complement with targeted factor or equal-weight sleeves.

    - Reassess exposures after major market regime changes or if SPX concentration moves meaningfully lower than current levels.

    Bottom line

    Elevated concentration in the S&P 500 (SPX) — currently 39.1% among the largest 10 firms — has created a structural environment where narrowed and reweighted S&P strategies can add value. These alternatives are not a panacea; they change the nature of risks and costs. For professional traders, institutional investors, and analysts, the most effective use is a calibrated allocation that balances diversification benefits, fees, turnover, and tax considerations.

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