Bank of America's proprietary bubble gauge for the Nasdaq 100 has crossed into dangerous territory for the first time since the AI boom began.
Bank of America's proprietary bubble gauge for the Nasdaq 100 has crossed into dangerous territory for the first time since the AI boom began.
Bank of America's proprietary bubble gauge for the Nasdaq 100 has crossed into dangerous territory for the first time since the AI boom began.
The Nasdaq 100's bubble risk indicator has hit 0.8, a threshold Bank of America warns shows sharply elevated two-sided risk for the tech-heavy index.
"The level of froth we are seeing in semiconductors is consistent with past market tops," said Benjamin Bowler, head of equity derivatives strategy at Bank of America. "The market's resilience to macro headwinds is itself a classic bubble-building characteristic."
The Nasdaq 100 has surged about 32% since late March, nearly double the S&P 500's gain. Semiconductor stocks including Micron Technology Inc., Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Intel Corp. account for the highest BRI readings, with eight of the 10 most frothy US stocks overweight in the Nasdaq 100. The divergence between the two benchmarks on the BRI scale has widened sharply, the bank noted.
The warning comes as US equities drew a record $119.2 billion in the week through June 17, with tech funds absorbing a record $19.2 billion. Hedge fund gross leverage has hit the 100th percentile, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co., while the semiconductor-to-Nasdaq ratio has surged 46% in 12 weeks — a velocity BTIG says has historically coincided only with major tops or bear-market bottoms.
Semiconductor Froth Drives the Divergence
Bank of America's Bubble Risk Indicator integrates four dimensions — return, volatility, momentum and fragility — to map risk on a zero-to-one scale, with 1 representing extreme froth. At 0.8, the Nasdaq's reading places it in the danger zone where both upside and downside risks rise sharply, the bank said. The S&P 500, by contrast, remains well below that threshold, reflecting a market where gains have been concentrated in a narrow set of AI-exposed names.
Beyond US equities, the bank identified European semiconductor and memory chip stocks, along with Japan's management reform theme, as global trades with elevated BRI readings. The reflexive nature of current markets — where momentum chasing reinforces itself — creates asymmetric upside risk in the near term but leaves the index vulnerable to the kind of violent corrections that have punctuated past bubbles, Bowler said.
BofA Recommends a Relative Value Hedge
To hedge against a potential Nasdaq pullback, BofA recommends a relative value trade: buying QQQ December 2026 $600 put options while selling SPY puts at the same strike. The strategy exploits a pricing anomaly where out-of-the-money put implied volatility on QQQ is cheap relative to SPY, despite the Nasdaq's higher realized risk. Backtesting shows the structure would have generated positive returns during both the 2000 dot-com crash and the 2022 correction, with a reward-to-risk ratio of about 4.3 times, according to the bank.
The Nasdaq closed down 1.32% to 26,166.60 on Monday, while the S&P 500 fell 0.37% to 7,472.79. The Dow rose 0.29% to 51,712.71, supported by a near 4% gain in Caterpillar Inc. The US 10-year Treasury yield climbed 5 basis points to 4.23%, the highest since February, as near-term Federal Reserve rate hike bets continued to climb. Brent crude fell 2.75% to $78.16 a barrel after the US and Iran agreed a roadmap to a final deal within 60 days.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.