
Change Happens All the Time
When we look at long-term market data, one thing becomes very clear. Change never stops. Nothing stays the same forever, especially in the world of markets. We live in a time where we must either adjust ourselves to new trends or we fall behind. This simple rule has shaped the market again and again over the last many decades.
How the Market Looked Many Years Ago
If we study the U.S. market from 1980 to 2025, we can see a big shift in how different sectors were valued (see the image below).

In 1980, almost 66% of the S&P 500 market cap came from manufacturing. Consumer companies held around 15%, and innovation-based companies like tech and communication were near 14%. Financials, along with REITs, were only about 5%. The entire market looked very different from what we see today.
How the Market Looks Today
By 2025, the picture has fully changed. Manufacturing has dropped to only 17% of the S&P 500 market cap. Consumer companies still remain in the double-digit range at around 17%. But the biggest change is in innovation-led companies. Tech and innovation now hold 49% of the total market cap—almost half of the entire index. This shows where the real value creation has happened in the last 20–30 years.
Why These Shifts Matter
Such strong changes tell us that markets reward new ideas and new technology. It also reminds us that no sector stays strong forever. In the coming 10–20 years, manufacturing may rise again in the U.S. If that happens, its share may grow from 17% to a much larger number. Or it may reach a peak and then slow again. The point is simple: trends keep changing, and we must follow them with open eyes instead of holding on to old giants that no longer grow.
Follow Trends, Not Old Beliefs
Many investors who held on to old manufacturing giants did not see much growth. Most of the strong returns in the last two decades came from tech, innovation, and AI-based companies. This shows how important it is to adjust our portfolios with changing trends. Momentum investing is one simple and effective way to follow current market strength. Looking at such data helps us understand where real growth is happening and how we should plan our investments.