Barclays’ trading desk is sounding the alarm on what might be the market’s most crowded trade. The bank is advising investors to purchase protection against a potential decline in the S&P 500, driven specifically by cracks forming in the technology sector that has carried the index for years.
Tech’s weight problem
Here’s the number that should make every portfolio manager pause: technology stocks now account for more than 39% of the S&P 500’s total market capitalization. That is higher than the concentration levels seen during the 2000 internet bubble, a period that ended with a multi-year drawdown that wiped out trillions in wealth.
Barclays’ recommendation to buy protection rather than simply reducing exposure suggests the bank sees the risk as asymmetric. The upside from staying fully invested in tech may be incremental at this point, while the downside from a sharp rotation or correction could be severe.
The Broadcom catalyst
The immediate trigger for Barclays’ advisory appears to be the recent weakness in chip stocks following Broadcom’s disappointing forward guidance. Semiconductor companies have been among the biggest beneficiaries of the AI spending boom, and their stock prices reflect expectations of sustained, rapid growth.
The sell-off also raises a deeper question about the sustainability of the AI capital expenditure cycle. Companies like Broadcom, Nvidia, and their peers have been valued on the assumption that enterprise and hyperscaler spending on AI infrastructure will continue accelerating. If that spending even plateaus, let alone contracts, the valuation math changes dramatically.
What this means for investors
Barclays’ call to buy protection is essentially a recommendation to purchase put options or similar derivative instruments that gain value when the S&P 500 falls. When everyone rushes to buy protection at the same time, implied volatility rises and hedges become more expensive. The time to buy protection, as Barclays is arguing, is before the consensus catches up to the risk.
The precedent from the dot-com era is instructive, even if the parallel isn’t exact. In 2000, concentration risk was the symptom, not the disease. Today’s tech sector is stronger on fundamentals, but the market structure vulnerability, having 39% of the index’s weight hanging on one sector’s continued outperformance, is arguably more acute than it was two and a half decades ago.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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