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The U.S. stock market in 2026 is quietly rewriting the rules. The once "Big Seven" tech giants are now charting their own paths, with their correlations dropping to nearly zero. These former market favorites saw five of them underperform the S&P 500 in 2025.
Numbers tell the story. At the start of 2026, the "Big Seven" index rose only 0.5%, while the S&P 500 increased by 1.8%, and the equal-weighted S&P index surged by 3.62%. What does this indicate? It shows that market money is flowing elsewhere.
The logic behind this is very realistic. The expected earnings growth rate for the "Big Seven" in 2026 is only 18%, the lowest in three years, narrowing the gap with the other 493 companies, which are growing at 13%. In other words, these tech giants are no longer the absolute growth engines. The market is beginning to open its eyes, no longer captivated by the "long-term hype" of AI investments, but instead questioning: what real returns can these massive capital expenditures actually generate?
The clearest signal comes from retail investors. Ordinary investors are pouring into non-"Big Seven" tech stocks at a 3.7 standard deviation level. They are voting with real money.
This shift means the U.S. stock market is transitioning from a "concentration bull market" to a "fundamentals bull market." The halo around tech giants is fading, but the overall market foundation is becoming healthier, and systemic risk is decreasing. For investors, it’s time to abandon the lazy mindset of "buying the Big Seven as a package" and start doing serious homework to select truly competitive individual stocks.