Open your retirement account and you probably see a line item like "S&P 500 index fund" and think: diversified, boring, safe. Five hundred companies. Set it and forget it.
Look closer. In the cap-weighted S&P 500 — the index behind SPY and VOO — more than a third of the fund now sits in just ten companies, and a group of mega-cap technology names drives most of that. The other roughly 490 companies split the rest. That's not a knock on the index. It's just not the evenly-spread bet the word "diversification" implies.
This piece is about the money you already hold. Not a pitch to abandon indexing, and not a pitch to start day-trading options. Just an honest look at what your index fund actually contains in 2026, why the tailwinds that made buy-and-hold feel effortless are fading, and the systematic tools built for a more selective market.
The record scratch: your index fund is a concentrated bet in disguise
Start with what SPY and VOO hold. They track the identical S&P 500 index, so their composition is effectively the same — same top names, same weights, same tilt. The only meaningful difference between them is cost, which we'll get to.
Here's the top of the fund, using SPY's published weights:
| Holding | Weight |
| NVIDIA (NVDA) | 7.8% |
| Apple (AAPL) | 6.8% |
| Alphabet (GOOGL + GOOG) | 6.0% |
| Microsoft (MSFT) | 4.6% |
| Amazon (AMZN) | 3.7% |
| Broadcom (AVGO) | 2.9% |
| Meta (META) | 2.0% |
| Tesla (TSLA) | 1.8% |
Add it up and the largest handful of technology and tech-adjacent names account for more than a third of the entire index. Technology as a sector sits at about 36% of the S&P 500. That single sector weight is more than double the combined weight of healthcare, energy, and consumer staples (together roughly 17% of the index).
None of this is hidden — it's a mechanical result of cap-weighting. When the biggest companies get bigger, the index automatically holds more of them. But it means "I own the S&P 500" in 2026 carries a much bigger technology and mega-cap tilt than the same sentence did a decade ago.
The cleanest way to see it: cap-weight vs. equal-weight
Put the same 500 companies in a fund that weights them equally and the picture changes completely. That's RSP, the Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF. Same names, but each gets roughly the same slice instead of being dominated by the giants.
The contrast is the whole story:
| Metric | SPY / VOO (cap-weighted) | RSP (equal-weighted) |
| Largest single holding | ~7.8% (NVDA) | ~0.5% |
| Technology sector weight | ~36% | 19.9% |
| Trailing yield | 1.01% (SPY) / 1.07% (VOO) | 1.51% |
| Expense ratio | 0.10% / 0.03% | 0.20% |
| AUM | $783.1B / $1,033.5B | $91.1B |
Yields are trailing figures as of July 9, 2026, from a paid data feed.
Same 500 companies. In the cap-weighted version, technology is roughly 36% of the fund; in the equal-weighted version, it's about 20%. Equal-weight also carries much heavier industrials, financials, and healthcare exposure. Neither is "correct" — they're different bets. The point is that most investors own the first one and assume they're getting something closer to the second.



