Key Takeaways:
- Policy backstops make protracted bear markets increasingly unlikely.
- The S&P 500's systemic importance creates moral hazard for investors.
- Leveraged ETF growth amplifies concentration risk in AI-linked names.
Key Takeaways:

The US stock market has grown so large and systemically important that policy backstops may render traditional bear markets obsolete, reshaping risk calculations for the roughly $50 trillion equity complex.
"The implicit Fed put has expanded from individual institutions to the entire market," said Michael Gapen, chief US economist at Bank of America. "That changes how investors think about drawdowns and portfolio construction."
The S&P 500 has not experienced a 20% decline since the 2022 bear market, with each subsequent pullback of 5% or more met by policy responses ranging from liquidity injections to direct market intervention. The Federal Reserve's emergency lending facilities, introduced during the pandemic and expanded in 2023, remain available for deployment. The Cboe Volatility Index has averaged 15.8 over the past 12 months, below its long-term median of 17.6, reflecting diminished tail-risk pricing. The 10 largest stocks in the S&P 500 now account for more than 35% of the index's market capitalization, a concentration not seen since the dot-com era, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices data.
The "too big to fail" dynamic creates a paradox: the very perception of a policy backstop encourages risk-taking that concentrates capital in a narrow set of megacap names, making the market more vulnerable to the crash the backstop is meant to prevent. The last time concentration reached these levels, in early 2000, the subsequent unwind erased $5 trillion in market value over two years. The US 10-year Treasury yield has averaged 4.3% over the past six months, providing an alternative return source that did not exist during the zero-rate era when equities were the only game in town.
Leveraged Products Add a New Layer of Fragility
The growth of leveraged single-stock ETFs has introduced a structural vulnerability that did not exist in previous market cycles. More than 450 leveraged and inverse single-security ETFs have launched since 2022, with assets under management surpassing $150 billion, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. Roughly a quarter of all new US ETF filings are now leveraged or inverse products, stacked overwhelmingly on a tightly correlated cluster of AI and semiconductor names.
Nomura Holdings estimates that leveraged ETFs generate roughly $9 billion of rebalancing demand for every 1% move in the market. Barclays puts recent US rebalancing at several times its long-run average. These products share a common fuse tied to the same AI capital spending outlook — when the trend breaks, they rebalance in the same direction, into the same closing auction, on the same afternoon.
South Korea's top financial regulator has openly regretted approving 16 leveraged chipmaker ETFs in May, saying the negative side-effects have grown significantly. A 3x short AMD product in Europe was wiped out in a single day's rally, illustrating the binary risk embedded in these structures. The cost of cliquets — chains of options banks use to hedge swap exposure on these products — has more than tripled for the hottest names over three months, according to the report. SK Hynix, the South Korean memory chipmaker, lists on Nasdaq on July 10, and issuers are expected to race to launch leveraged products tied to the stock.
The banks themselves are not holding the crash risk — they buy protection through cliquets and swaps, which are absorbed by yield-seeking asset managers and hedge funds collecting premiums in exchange for wearing tail risk. This is the oldest structure in finance, the one that detonated in the 2018 volatility blowup and, in a grander key, in 2008, when monoline insurers who sold cheap insurance on mortgage-backed securities were vaporized when the tail risk arrived.
The Backstop's First Real Test
The policy backstop thesis faces its first real test when the next sustained downturn arrives. If the Fed or Treasury intervenes during a routine correction, it would validate the "too big to fail" market narrative and encourage further risk concentration. If they hold back, the unwind of leveraged positions could accelerate losses in ways that the 2022 bear market — a slow, orderly decline driven by rate hikes — did not prepare investors for.
"The market is pricing in a put that has never been explicitly written," said Lori Calvasina, head of US equity strategy at RBC Capital Markets. "The question is what happens when the strike price gets tested."
The US Securities and Exchange Commission has capped leverage in single-stock ETFs at 2x under Rule 18f-4, rejecting applications for 3x and 5x products. But that leaves open the danger of 450 individually compliant funds all pointed at roughly the same trade, selling together when the AI trade unwinds. The system is stable for now, as one analyst put it, in the way a row of dominoes is stable: every piece individually hedged, the eventual loss already sold to the retail buyer who mistakes a paper gain for profit.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.