Watching SPY reach a new 52-week high in a week when the average American is paying close to $4 for a gallon of gas, tariff negotiations are taking place in back rooms, and the Strait of Hormuz is hardly navigable is almost disorienting. Nevertheless, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust reached an intraday high of $709.90 on April 17, 2026, before falling slightly short of that amount. The market chose to rise, as it frequently does when confronted with a truly chaotic world. It’s worth considering whether that represents true corporate strength or something more akin to institutional momentum.
Although most people treat SPY like a stock, it is not a stock in the traditional sense. All 504 of the current S&P 500 companies are included in this exchange-traded fund, which was first listed in January 1993 and is weighted by market capitalization. At the current price, purchasing one share entitles one to fractional shares of NVIDIA, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and the other 499 companies listed below. Owning the entire game instead of placing bets on winners is an elegantly simple concept. Over the past ten years, investors who have patiently adhered to that philosophy have consistently outperformed the great majority of actively managed funds with annualized returns of about 140% over ten years.
The question that isn’t asked loud enough is the one about concentration. Almost 35% of the fund’s total weight is made up of information technology. Just NVIDIA is at more than 8%. In practical terms, this means that purchasing SPY in 2026 is essentially a wager on the demand for AI infrastructure to keep rising since NVIDIA is the driving force behind it and a sizable portion of the index follows suit. Ten years ago, most portfolio managers would have been concerned about this degree of top-heaviness in a single theme. Millions of retirement accounts now consider it to be synonymous with diversification because it is ingrained in the product. It’s still unclear if this concentration makes SPY riskier than its reputation implies or if the companies that grew to dominate the index just deserved their position.
The twelve-month headline obscures the complexity of the year-to-date narrative. The gain since January 1st has been modest, a few percent during volatile months that included a February correction pushing SPY toward the $508 range. However, the one-year return through late April is close to 17.6%. A difficult first quarter was caused by a combination of tariff pressure, geopolitical tension, and a Federal Reserve that hasn’t made any clear commitments. What ensued was a gradual recovery based on higher-than-anticipated corporate profits and consumer spending that persisted despite all predictions to the contrary. As a result, despite a year that still feels uncertain, the fund is sitting close to all-time highs.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Fund Name | SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust |
| Ticker | SPY (NYSE Arca) |
| Founded | January 22, 1993 |
| Sponsor | State Street Global Advisors (PDR) |
| Current Price (Apr 21, 2026) | ~$708.72 |
| 52-Week High | $709.90 |
| 52-Week Low | $508.46 |
| Assets Under Management | ~$721.9 billion |
| Expense Ratio | 0.0945% |
| Number of Holdings | 504 |
| Top Holding | NVIDIA Corp (8.06%) |
| Largest Sector | Information Technology (34.88%) |
| 1-Year Return (NAV) | 17.64% |
| 10-Year Return (NAV) | 14.01% annually |
| Since Inception Return | ~10.45% annually |
| Daily Average Volume | ~60 million shares |
| Morningstar Rating | 4 Stars (Large Blend) |

Because it contributes to the longevity of SPY’s dominance, the expense ratio merits discussion. Owning $10,000 of the fund results in annual management fees of less than $10 at a rate of 0.0945%. This would seem nearly unrealistic to investors who recall the mutual fund era of the 1980s, when annual fees of 1% and 1.5% were typical. The steady absorption of assets from active managers by index funds can be attributed in large part to this cost advantage, which has been compounded over decades. When it comes to trading on any exchange, SPY continues to be the most liquid evidence of Jack Bogle’s claim that most professionals are unable to consistently outperform the index.
Alongside the concentration story, it’s important to keep in mind that the P/E ratio, which is currently close to 27, is not cheap by historical standards. The index could move more dramatically than the term “diversification” suggests if five or six megacap companies have a poor earnings season. Watching SPY trade close to its highs during a turbulent time gives the impression that complacency and confidence are sitting close to each other and don’t always stay in their own lanes.

