A recent comprehensive analysis of the U.S. stock market's performance over the last century highlights a significant shift in wealth creation, with technology giants now dominating the landscape. While the market has generated immense prosperity, a striking majority of individual stocks have underperformed compared to Treasury bills. This trend underscores the importance of a few exceptionally successful companies, primarily from the tech sector, in driving overall market gains. Amidst this tech-centric environment, two non-tech behemoths, Exxon Mobil and Walmart, stand out for their enduring ability to create substantial shareholder value through sustained, long-term strategies.
For decades, the composition of top wealth-generating companies reflected the industrial era, featuring names like Exxon Mobil, General Electric, IBM, Altria Group, and General Motors. However, the period between 1926 and 2025 has seen a dramatic transformation. Professor Hendrik Bessembinder of Arizona State University's W.P. Carey School of Business, who has meticulously tracked these patterns, reveals that the top echelons are now predominantly occupied by tech firms. The current roster of wealth champions includes Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Broadcom, Meta, and Tesla, collectively filling eight of the top ten positions.
These tech companies have achieved their prominence through rapid growth and innovation. Apple, for instance, is responsible for 5.5% of all wealth generated in U.S. stock market history, while Nvidia, propelled by the artificial intelligence boom, accounts for another 5%, with much of its growth concentrated in recent years. This rapid ascent contrasts sharply with the steady, incremental growth seen in traditional sectors. Bessembinder's methodology for ranking companies focuses on "wealth creation," which quantifies the financial gains for shareholders above what Treasury bills would have yielded, encompassing dividends and share buybacks. This metric reveals the market's extreme concentration: merely 46 companies are responsible for half of the total $91 trillion in wealth accumulated, with the top 10 alone contributing nearly one-third.
Despite the overwhelming dominance of Big Tech, Exxon Mobil and Walmart maintain their positions as significant wealth creators. Exxon Mobil, a constant presence in the market since 1926, and Walmart, publicly traded since 1970, have both built their fortunes by consistently returning value to shareholders through dividends. Exxon Mobil has increased its dividend for 43 consecutive years, paying out $17.2 billion in 2025 alone, while Walmart boasts 53 consecutive annual dividend increases, earning it a place among the "Dividend Kings." Their strategies of sustained growth and consistent payouts have allowed investors to benefit from decades of compounding returns, demonstrating that even "boring" businesses can generate immense wealth over extended periods.
The evolving landscape of wealth creation in the stock market offers valuable insights for investors. The fact that most individual stocks underperform Treasury bills, and that a small number of companies drive the majority of market wealth, suggests the difficulty of consistently picking individual winners. This supports the argument for investing in broad index funds, which offer exposure to the entire market, including its top performers. Furthermore, the increasing concentration of wealth within a few massive tech companies means that index fund investors are inherently making a significant bet on these giants. However, the enduring success of companies like Exxon Mobil and Walmart serves as a powerful reminder that long-term consistency and reliable dividend growth remain viable paths to substantial wealth, even in a market increasingly defined by rapid technological advancement.
