How Market Concentration Shapes Passive and Active Equity Returns

20 June 2025
3 min read
John H. Fogarty, CFA| Co-Chief Investment Officer—US Growth Equities and US Relative Value
Matthew Whitehurst| Director and Investment Strategist—Equities
Record Benchmark Concentration Has Fueled Passive’s Outperformance
Active Portfolios Outperformed During Significant Periods of Concentration Unwinding
Mountain chart shows the weight of the 10 largest holdings in the Russell 1000 Growth Index from 1986 to 2025, and highlights performance of the passive index during periods of concentrating and broadening markets.

Past performance does not guarantee future results.
References to specific securities discussed are not to be considered recommendations by AllianceBernstein L.P. Russell 1000 Growth returns are ranked by percentile against the eVestment US Large Cap Growth Equity category.
As of May 31, 2025
Source: Bloomberg, company reports, eVestment, FTSE Russell and AllianceBernstein (AB)

Over the last decade, the 10 largest stocks in the Russell 1000 Growth Index rose to dizzying heights to dominate the market (Display). When the top stocks consistently outperform, it’s hard for active equity portfolios to beat the benchmark, particularly those that adhere to time-tested principles of diversification. But we believe a potential reversal of this concentration could turn the picture around for skilled, active equity managers.

It’s well known that today’s market concentration is extreme. At the end of 2024, the 10 largest stocks comprised roughly 60% of the Russell 1000 Growth. That’s much higher than the last major concentration peak, when the top 10 accounted for 42% of the benchmark in May 2001. 

Passive Portfolios Enjoyed the Ride 

Market concentration rewarded passive investors who held market weights in the surging mega-caps. Since late 2014, passive index returns ranked in the 10th percentile of all portfolios in eVestment’s US Large Cap Growth Equity universe. In other words, only 10% of active managers outperformed.

The reason is simple: underweight positions in the mega-caps raised performance hurdles for active managers by creating big deviations from a soaring benchmark.

Active Did Well When Concentration Reversed

Passive performance during past concentrated markets was mixed. However, when concentration reversed, most active portfolios outperformed. From 1992 to 1994 and from 2001 to 2007, index returns dropped to the 86th and 78th percentiles, respectively, shown in the yellow segments of the display above.

Although past performance never guarantees future results, we think an unwinding of today’s concentration would energize active managers. We saw a glimpse of that in the first quarter of 2025: markets were more discriminating, returns of the largest stocks diverged, concentration dipped, and 68% of active US Large Cap Growth equity portfolios outperformed.

Of course, most of the US giants are great businesses. But in our view, they should be owned selectively and at appropriate weights according to an equity portfolio’s investment philosophy. 

Will Markets Broaden? 

Predicting the future is challenging, especially when it relates to trends that developed over years. But we think the domination of a small group of companies is unlikely to persist indefinitely as lofty valuations, geopolitics and antitrust pressure increase the importance of selectivity among the mega-caps going forward.

Perhaps most notable is the advent of AI as a computing platform shift. Every prior platform shift challenged incumbent leaders, whether it was the transition from mainframes to the PC era, or the development of the internet and mobile computing. We do not think that AI will be any different and already see signs that disruption is poised to enable new leaders while undermining others. Although disruptive trends are hard to forecast, research is the best antidote to extrapolating past success.

Today’s elevated concentration peak suggests that even a partial reversal could have a profound effect on return patterns. Yet the process won’t be linear over short periods; in the second quarter through mid-June, the mega-cap cohort did well again and market concentration resumed.

That said, this year shows that markets can broaden in both rising and falling markets. So when volatility strikes, we would resist the urge to reduce equity holdings. Instead, consider reallocating toward actively managed portfolios, which offer risk-management benefits for today’s uncertainty and the potential to capitalize on a long-term broadening of market returns toward stocks that deserve greater appreciation for their high-quality businesses.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations, and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams, and are subject to change over time.

References to specific securities discussed are for illustrative purposes only and should not to be considered recommendations by AllianceBernstein L.P. It should not be assumed that investments in the securities mentioned have necessarily been or will necessarily be profitable.


About the Authors

John H. Fogarty is a Senior Vice President and Co-Chief Investment Officer for US Growth Equities. He rejoined the firm in 2006 as a fundamental research analyst covering consumer-discretionary stocks in the US, having previously spent nearly three years as a hedge fund manager at Dialectic Capital Management and Vardon Partners. Fogarty began his career at AB in 1988, performing quantitative research, and joined the US Large Cap Growth team as a generalist and quantitative analyst in 1995. He became a portfolio manager in 1997. Fogarty holds a BA in history from Columbia University and is a CFA charterholder. Location: New York

 

Matthew Whitehurst is a Director and Investment Strategist for Equities at AB. He joined the firm in 2023 and has been in the investment management industry since 2015. Whitehurst’s previous roles have ranged from being a counterparty credit risk analyst to being a senior manager research analyst covering domestic small and mid-cap active managers. Prior to joining AB, he worked in investment research at LPL Financial and also worked at Wells Fargo Securities and the Vanguard Group. Whitehurst holds a BS in finance and a BS in accounting from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He is a CFA charterholder. Location: Nashville