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The Magnificent Seven Have Gone Nowhere in 2026 — And That’s Now a Problem for Wall Street’s Year-End Targets

by Team Lumida
July 9, 2026
in Markets
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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  • The Bloomberg Magnificent Seven Price Return Index — which includes Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Tesla — has gained just 0.5% in 2026 versus the S&P 500’s 9.3% gain, an 11-percentage-point gap that represents the group’s second-worst start to a year relative to the broader index on record; since the Magnificent Seven constitute roughly one-third of the S&P 500 by weight, their stagnation is the primary reason the index is lagging its own earnings trajectory.
  • The AI trade has dramatically rotated away from the hyperscalers toward semiconductor and hardware names: the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index has surged 78% in 2026 — more than 150x the Magnificent Seven’s gain — as investors bet that chipmakers and memory suppliers are the most direct beneficiaries of AI capex, while the hyperscalers themselves are treated as the capital allocators whose spending benefits others more than their own stocks.
  • Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s CIO Lisa Shalett has declared it time to revisit the Magnificent Seven: “Acceleration of backlogged order books and expanding pricing power among semiconductor makers and ‘memory’ suppliers have been eye-popping, but we don’t think they’re sustainable. This is not a call on the cycle’s end, but it is a call to rebuild diversified exposure to potential AI build-out winners, re-embracing some of the hyperscalers” — while Goldman’s Rich Privorotsky frames it as hyperscalers “own the toll road, not just the car.”
  • The valuation case for the Magnificent Seven has meaningfully improved: the group’s forward P/E has compressed to 23.9x from 32.6x in late October, and the premium over the broader S&P 500 has narrowed to just 2.4 points — near the lowest ever — making these names cheaper relative to history and relative to the market than they have been at virtually any point during the AI bull market; the question is whether that cheapness is a buying opportunity or a reflection of genuine growth deceleration.

What Happened?

The defining trade of the past decade has stalled. The Magnificent Seven — the group of mega-cap technology companies that powered the 2023-2025 bull run — have gone essentially nowhere in 2026, gaining just 0.5% while the S&P 500 is up 9.3% and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has surged 78%. The group has trailed more than 300 individual S&P 500 stocks this year, including relative minnows like Dollar Tree and Hubbell. Their underperformance creates a mathematical problem for Wall Street: the Magnificent Seven constitute one-third of the S&P 500 by weight, and the average analyst year-end target of 7,824 implies roughly 5% upside from Wednesday’s close. If the Magnificent Seven stays flat, the remaining 493 stocks — already up 13% year-to-date — would need to rally an additional 6.8% to hit the consensus target.

Why It Matters?

The Magnificent Seven’s stagnation is not a mystery: investors have rotated AI exposure from the hyperscalers (who spend on AI) toward the semiconductors (who sell to AI spenders), a trade that has been rewarded dramatically. But Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan have in the past two weeks each flagged the Magnificent Seven’s underperformance as having gone too far — and the valuation argument is compelling. At 23.9x forward earnings with only a 2.4-point premium over the S&P 500 (near the lowest ever), these are genuinely cheaper stocks than at any point during the AI bull market. Goldman’s Privorotsky captures the bull case succinctly: hyperscalers “own the toll road, not just the car” — meaning as AI compute becomes commoditized and cheaper, the companies that own the customer relationships and monetization layer (Microsoft Copilot, Google Cloud, AWS, Meta’s ad platform) capture the durable economic value.

What’s Next?

The catalyst for a Magnificent Seven re-rating will likely be the upcoming earnings season, where hyperscaler revenue and AI monetization data will either validate or challenge the “toll road” thesis. If Microsoft’s Copilot seat counts, Google’s AI search monetization, or Amazon’s AWS AI revenue show meaningful acceleration, it would provide the fundamental catalyst for multiple expansion. Conversely, if hyperscaler results show that AI spending is driving cost increases without commensurate revenue growth, the rotation to semis will continue. Wells Fargo’s Sameer Samana offers the structural alternative: the non-Magnificent Seven S&P 500 stocks — already up 13% — could theoretically carry the index to its year-end target without the mega-caps, but would require extraordinary breadth to offset the index weight deficit.

Source: Bloomberg

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Lumida's website (referred to herein as the "Website") is limited to the dissemination of general information pertaining to its advisory services, together with access to additional investment-related information, publications, and links. Accordingly, the publication of the Website on the Internet should not be construed by any client and/or prospective client Lumida’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect transactions in securities, or the rendering of personalized investment advice for compensation, over the Internet.

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