Stocks, Bubbles & Market Myths
Each quarter, I prepare a detailed deck and call for Ritholtz Wealth Management clients.1 I start with about 100 ideas and charts, then cut them down to 30 charts and 30 minutes. (Shout out to Chart Kid Matt for his excellent work) Selecting lots of great charts is easy, but curating them into a short, easily consumable deck is the challenge.2
As I do my research in the weeks leading up to the end of the quarter, I have to fight my way through a lot of inaccurate financial data, baseless opinions, and misleading commentary. Much of it is not useful; some is out of context, and lots simply wrong. I fear that too much of what I see, read, and hear will lead its consumers to poor investment outcomes.3
I pulled five charts from the deck to share with you; they counter some of the misinformation out there. I hope you find these useful and thought-provoking.
2025 US Equities Up Broadly
U.S stocks had a solid year, with the S&P 500 up 17.9% and the Nasdaq 100 gaining 21.0%. As yyou can see in the chart at top, gains broadened out beyond the Communication and Technology sectors (33.6% and 24%), to the Industrials (+19.3%), Utilities (+16%), Financials (+15%), and Health Care (+14.6%). There were solid gains across most sectors, with Real Estate (3.1%), Staples (3.9%) and Discretionary (6.0%) as the major laggards.
There were only 153 stocks in the S&P 500 that beat the index average; 350 were below 17.9%. That’s narrower than I prefer, but not fatal.
No SPX sector was in the red for 2025.
The bigger news was global: After 15 years of U.S. equity dominance, the rest of the world began to catch up: International stocks rose 33% in 2025. This shift was driven in part by a weakening U.S. dollar, down almost 10%. Global trading partners are repatriating capital due to dissatisfaction with U.S. trade and security policies. While U.S. earnings remain solid, the market is benefiting from diversification as international equities catch up
Market Concentration
The most surprising chart in the entire deck is this one: Only 2 of the “Magnificent Seven” outperformed the index. TWO! After hearing for so long from the Concentration Bears that the Mag 7 would be the end of us all, this single datapoint perfectly frames that argument.
Perhaps the Mag 7 dominance is fading; if five of these seven companies underperformed the S&P 500, that means the other 493 companies are catching up in both price appreciation and (eventually) earnings growth.
Valuation
I wonder if the persistent “bubble callers” would be surprised by this chart: Valuations are (mostly) flat: Unlike the dot-com era, which saw P/E multiples expand so dramatically, P/E multiples have remained flat for the past five years. Forward P/E ratios for core AI companies like Meta, Google, Amazon, and Microsoft have also remained stable or declined.
Debt
Bubbles are typically driven by excessive leveraging, but current debt growth remains a fraction of what was seen in 1999–2000. Debt was essentially flat for five years, with only a 9% increase in 2025. Compare this to the last few years of triple-digit debt growth in the 1990s: +111%, +152%, and +187%!
Earnings
If you could only see one data point to guess how markets have performed, it would be earnings.
Earnings grew at a robust pace. Unlike the dotcom era, the AI “boom” is supported by tangible business results rather than pure speculation. For example, despite predictions that AI would kill its core business, Google successfully integrated AI into search and saw its stock rise 65% in 2025.
See also:
The Concentration Bears Have Steered You Wrong
Josh Brown
Downtown, Dec 13, 2025
The Probability of Loss in the Stock Market
Ben Carlson
A Wealth of Common Sense, January 9, 2026
Previously:
10 Datapoints for Thanksgiving (November 26, 2025)
Rational Exuberance? (November 24, 2025)
A Short History of Bubbles (October 24, 2025)
The Probability Machine (August 28, 2025)
All Time Highs Are Bullish (June 26, 2025)
__________
1. If Compliance gives me the OK, I’ll release the full deck and call in the near future.
2. “I have made this longer than usual because I have not had time to make it shorter.” – Blaise Pascal, “Lettres Provinciales,” 1657.
3. I even wrote a book about the impact of all of this bad information!
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