From 2020 to 2025, the US market felt like a one track story: mega cap technology. The “Magnificent 7” did a huge amount of the heavy lifting, and the S&P 500 became more concentrated than most beginners realize.
In early 2026, leadership started to broaden. Cyclical sectors like Industrials and Energy began to outpace, Tech cooled off, and even traditionally defensive areas like Utilities started getting attention again. That shift has a name: sector rotation.
What Is Sector Rotation?
Sector rotation is the idea that different parts of the stock market lead at different times. Sometimes Technology leads. Sometimes Financials do. Sometimes Energy, Industrials, or Utilities take the baton.
The key point is simple: the market is not one thing. It is a collection of businesses that respond differently to growth, inflation, and interest rates.
The business cycle connection
Sector leadership is often explained using the economic cycle: early recovery, mid cycle, late cycle, and recession. This is not a perfect map, but it is a useful way to think about why leadership changes.
| Economic phase | Typical leaders | What is usually happening |
|---|---|---|
| Early recovery | Financials, Consumer Discretionary, Industrials, Materials | Growth rebounds, credit loosens, sentiment improves. |
| Mid cycle | Technology, Health Care, Energy, Materials | Steady growth, profits expand, capex picks up. |
| Late cycle | Energy, Utilities, Consumer Staples | Growth slows, inflation pressure can rise, policy can tighten. |
| Recession | Health Care, Utilities, Consumer Staples | Growth contracts, investors seek stability and defensiveness. |
Sector rotation vs factor rotation
Sector rotation is about industries. Factor rotation is about characteristics. For example, Value vs Growth, Momentum vs Low Volatility, or Quality vs High Beta. (Source: Zorroh – Factor Investing Explained)
Evidence of Rotation in Early 2026
The early 2026 tape looks different from the 2020 to 2024 era. Investors have been rotating into parts of the market tied to real economy spending, commodities, and rate sensitive cash flows.
Sector fund flows (January 2026)
One clean way to spot rotation is to look at sector ETF flows. When money consistently moves into cyclicals while Tech flows cool, that is rotation in action. (Source: State Street Global Advisors – Sector Chart Pack (PDF))
| Sector | Prior month flows (USD millions) | Trailing 3 month flows (USD millions) |
|---|---|---|
| Materials | 7,403 | 9,302 |
| Energy | 5,685 | 7,182 |
| Financials | 4,196 | 1,222 |
| Industrials | 3,289 | 5,595 |
| Health Care | 2,262 | 5,077 |
| Technology | -1,470 | 343 |
| Consumer Discretionary | -1,202 | -1,362 |
Valuations across sectors (snapshot)
Rotation is rarely only about returns. It is also about what investors are willing to pay. When leadership is crowded, multiples can get stretched, and the next dollar starts looking elsewhere. (Source: World PE Ratio – S&P 500 Sectors P/E Ratios)
| Sector | Trailing P/E (approx.) | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Information Technology | 37.30 | Expensive on an absolute basis. |
| Consumer Discretionary | 31.74 | Expensive, sensitive to growth expectations. |
| Industrials | 30.79 | Strong momentum, valuation has rerated upward. |
| S&P 500 (overall) | 28.33 | Elevated relative to long term averages. |
| Utilities | 21.70 | Rate sensitive, often benefits when rates stabilize. |
| Energy | 20.56 | Multiple expansion can drive returns when sentiment shifts. |
| Financials | 18.07 | Cheaper than many sectors, tends to like a steeper curve. |
| Communication Services | 17.84 | Often overlooked, can benefit from AI productivity and ad recovery. |
Why Is Leadership Rotating Now?
- Tech valuations and crowding: Great businesses can still deliver flat returns if the multiple compresses.
- Rates moved from hikes to stabilization: A stable or easing rate environment can support Financials, Industrials, and Utilities.
- Fiscal and capex is strong: Real world spending can push money into Industrials, Energy, and Utilities.
- The AI theme split: The trade evolved from building infrastructure to monetizing productivity.
How This Connects to Diversification
Sector rotation is not an argument for constant trading. For most investors, it is an argument for owning the whole market and staying diversified. (Source: Zorroh – Diversification in Investing; Zorroh – ETF Investing for Beginners)
A practical framework: core satellite
If you want to express a view without turning your portfolio into a guessing game, use a core satellite setup. Keep most of your money in broad ETFs, then tilt a smaller slice toward a sector thesis.
| Component | Typical allocation | Purpose | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core | 70 to 90% | Broad exposure, low cost, long horizon | Broad market equity ETF, global equity ETF, bond ETF |
| Satellite | 10 to 30% | Modest tilts, controlled experimentation | Sector ETFs like Industrials, Financials, Utilities, Energy |
The Risks of Active Sector Rotation
Sector rotation sounds easy on paper, but it is hard in real time. Markets move before the economic data confirms anything. Trading also adds friction: costs, taxes, and behavioural mistakes.
- Timing risk: You can be early and still be wrong for a long time.
- Costs and taxes: Frequent changes can erode returns.
- Concentration risk: Sector bets can get hit when a single narrative breaks.
- Behaviour: Rotation often becomes performance chasing.
Try It Yourself: The Zorroh Portfolio Analyzer
You can use this to model and see past portfolios: https://analyzer.zorroh.com
🧭 How to Use the Portfolio Analyzer
- Select your ETFs: Open the sidebar (tap the
>>icon on the top left) and pick up to 5 ETFs, for example SPY, EFA, AGG, VNQ, GLD. - Adjust weights: Make them total about 100%. Click Normalize Weights if needed.
- Choose a benchmark: Compare your portfolio against a reference ETF (SPY by default).
- Pick a date range: The analyzer supports up to 10 plus years of history depending on the ETF.
- Select a rebalancing frequency: Choose monthly, quarterly, annually, or buy and hold.
- Run the analysis: Charts update automatically.
Interpret results
- CAGR / Sharpe / Max DD: Assess risk adjusted performance.
- Tracking Error / Information Ratio: Evaluate active performance vs benchmark.
- Correlation Matrix: Spot diversification benefits.
- Drawdowns: Understand downside risk.
- ETF Performance tab: Explore returns, risk metrics, and calendar year heatmaps for all ETFs.
Disclaimer:
The content on this blog (Zorroh) is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Investing involves risk.

