
Alpha Exchange Andrew Lapthorne, Global Head of Quantitative Research, Societe Generale
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Jan 15, 2026 Andrew Lapthorne, Global Head of Quantitative Research at Société Générale, dives into today's extraordinary market dynamics. He reveals how a handful of mega-cap stocks dominate profits and raises alarms about valuation bubbles. Andrew highlights that while major indices seem stable, the average stock is pricier than during past bubbles. He critiques the impact of passive investing on market behavior, arguing it amplifies concentration risks. Their conversation also touches on the limitations of AI in trading and potential triggers for market shifts.
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Index Concentration Reshapes Valuation Dynamics
- Market concentration is extreme: ten mega-cap stocks now dominate index weight, profits, and capex.
- That concentration changes how valuations and rotations work across the whole index.
Average Stock Is More Expensive Than 2000
- Average stocks are pricier today than during the 1999–2000 TMT bubble on a cross-sectional basis.
- The headline index PE looks calmer because a handful of profitable giants lift aggregate metrics.
Passive Flows Reduce Rotation Options
- Passive flows force valuation changes across all index constituents, reducing cheap rotation opportunities.
- Active managers' tracking-error budgets are largely consumed by these top stocks.




