
S&P 500
Benchmark US stock index tracking 500 large companies; key gauge of AI investment sentiment.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026
Is the S&P 500 five points from a dot-com repeat?
Latest on S&P 500
- Is the S&P 500 in a bubble?
- The Shiller CAPE ratio stands at 40, five points below the dot-com peak of 44.2. The IMF has warned valuations are approaching internet-era levels.Source: background
- Why is the S&P 500 so concentrated?
- Top AI-exposed companies (Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, Amazon) account for an outsized share of total market cap, making AI sentiment swings move the entire index.Source: background
- What did the IMF say about AI stocks?
- Managing Director Georgieva warned that AI valuations are "heading toward levels we saw during the bullishness about the internet 25 years ago."Source: background
Background
The S&P 500 is the benchmark index for US large-cap equities, tracking 500 companies across all sectors. In the AI era it has become the primary gauge of whether AI investment enthusiasm is sustainable or a bubble in formation.
The Shiller cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio stood at 40 in early 2026, approaching the dot-com peak of 44.2. IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva warned that AI valuations are "heading toward levels we saw during the bullishness about the internet 25 years ago."
The index is heavily concentrated: the top AI-exposed names (Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, Amazon) account for an outsized share of total market cap. This concentration means AI sentiment swings move the entire index, making the S&P 500 as much an AI confidence barometer as a broad market measure.