The S&P 500’s Semiconductor Dependence – Opportunity, Momentum, and the Risks Ahead
The S&P 500 has staged an impressive rally in 2026. After the sharp sell-off in April, US equities have rebounded strongly, with the index pushing back to record highs. On the surface, it looks like a market being supported by resilient earnings, a still-solid economy, and investors willing to lean back into growth.
But under the surface, the picture is less broad-based.
A closer look at market internals shows that the equal-weight version of the S&P 500 continues to lag the traditional cap-weighted index. In other words, this rally is not being driven evenly across the market. Instead, a relatively small group of mega-cap names is doing most of the work.
At the heart of that leadership is one sector, semiconductors.
Semiconductors Have Become the Market's Engine
By mid-May 2026, semiconductor stocks have become one of the most important drivers of US equity performance.
According to market data cited by Reuters, semiconductor companies now make up roughly 18% of the S&P 500 and have accounted for around 70% of the index's market-cap gains this year. That is an extraordinary level of influence for a single industry. Over the same period, the PHLX Semiconductor Index has significantly outperformed the broader market, highlighting just how aggressively investors have rotated into the space.
The main force behind that move remains artificial intelligence.
What began as an AI enthusiasm story in 2024 has evolved into something much larger: a global infrastructure cycle. The world's largest technology companies continue pouring capital into AI data centres, accelerated computing, networking equipment, and cloud infrastructure. Nearly every part of that spending cycle eventually feeds into semiconductor demand.
That has created powerful tailwinds for companies such as NVIDIA, Advanced Micro Devices, Broadcom, Micron Technology, and Intel. Demand for GPUs, high-bandwidth memory, advanced packaging, and networking chips continues to support both revenue growth and investor confidence.
Recent earnings have only strengthened that narrative. Strong guidance from AMD earlier this month helped fuel another wave of buying across the chip sector, reinforcing the view that AI-related demand is not just a story, but increasingly visible in corporate results.
That is what makes semiconductors so influential right now. Investors are not simply buying current earnings. They are positioning for what they believe could be a multi-year AI investment cycle.
Is There Still Opportunity?
The short answer is yes, although the trade is becoming more selective.
The long-term case for semiconductors still makes sense. AI adoption remains relatively early, enterprise deployment is still developing, and hyperscalers continue expanding capacity. Governments are also starting to invest in domestic and sovereign AI infrastructure, which could add another layer of demand.
If that spending continues, earnings expectations across the semiconductor space could still move higher.
There is also a sign of healthy market development: leadership within semiconductors is broadening. While NVIDIA remains the flagship name, investors are increasingly finding opportunities in memory, foundries, optical connectivity, advanced packaging, and networking infrastructure.
That matters because broader participation within the sector can often help extend a cycle.
At the same time, investors should recognise that the easy part of this rally may be behind us. Earlier gains were driven largely by expanding valuations and enthusiasm around AI. From here, future upside may depend far more on actual earnings delivery and management guidance than on narrative alone.
The Risks Are Growing
For all the optimism, risks are clearly building.
The biggest is concentration.
Market breadth remains relatively weak, and only around half of S&P 500 stocks are trading above key technical levels despite the index sitting near all-time highs. That suggests the rally is more fragile than the headline numbers imply. If semiconductor leadership starts to fade, there may not be enough strength elsewhere in the market to absorb the pressure.
Valuation is another concern.
After such a strong run, semiconductor stocks are trading at elevated levels versus historical trends. Momentum remains powerful, but periods of extreme outperformance often come with higher volatility, especially when expectations are already high.
Then there is the macro backdrop.
Inflation pressures have started to creep back into the conversation, partly driven by energy prices and geopolitical tensions. If inflation remains sticky, bond yields could stay elevated for longer, reducing the likelihood of near-term rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. That environment can become more challenging for high-multiple growth sectors like semiconductors.
Finally, there is execution risk.
AI expectations are now exceptionally high. Any sign of slower data-centre spending, weaker-than-expected guidance, supply chain disruptions, or export restrictions could trigger a sharp reassessment across the sector.
Final Thought
For now, semiconductors remain the dominant force behind the S&P 500's advance. As long as AI spending, earnings momentum, and capital investment remain intact, the trend can continue.
But the market's dependence on one trade is becoming harder to ignore.
If semiconductor leadership holds, the S&P 500 may have room to keep climbing. If it starts to crack, investors could quickly be reminded that this rally has been far narrower than the headline index suggests.
References
Russell Shor
Senior Market Strategist
Russell Shor is a Senior Market Strategist at FXCM, having been promoted to the role in 2025 in recognition of his depth of insight and consistent delivery of high-impact market analysis. He originally joined FXCM in October 2017 as a Senior Market Specialist.
Russell holds an Honours Degree in Economics from the University of South Africa, is a certified FMVA®, and a full member of the Society of Technical Analysts (UK). With over 20 years of experience in financial markets, his work is renowned for its clarity, precision, and strategic value across asset classes.
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