Surging Interest in High-Beta Stocks Sends Caution Signal to Market
Stocks are flirting with record highs, and right on cue, CNBC’s Jim Cramer has rolled out another FOMO-fueled acronym: PARC — Palantir, Applovin, Robinhood, and Coinbase. These are high-momentum names, especially Palantir, that often trade with little regard for traditional valuation measures.
Social media had a field day, pointing out that PARC spelled backward is… not exactly bullish.
But beyond the jokes, there’s real concern. The renewed rush into high-beta stocks — shares that swing more wildly than the broader market — is raising red flags for analysts. One of them is Dubravko Lakos-Bujas, chief strategist at JPMorgan.
In a Monday note, Lakos-Bujas highlighted three instances this year where investor behavior became “extremely crowded” around specific styles. First came the January surge into mega-cap AI names. Then, in April, fears of an AI slowdown and tariffs sparked a shift into safer, low-volatility stocks.
Now? The crowd is piling into high-beta plays, reaching the 100th percentile of crowding, a level JPMorgan calls historically extreme. This stampede includes both speculative growth and deeply discounted value stocks — many of which feature in retail trading circles.

According to JPMorgan, the surge is being fueled by a combination of:
- Optimism around a “Goldilocks” economic outcome (steady growth + easier Fed policy)
- Relief over tariffs fading (the so-called TACO trade)
- Institutions chasing high-octane, speculative opportunities

What’s especially alarming is how fast this shift happened. Positioning in high-beta stocks rocketed from the 25th to 100th percentile in just three months — the fastest rise in 30 years. Meanwhile, short interest has collapsed, meaning few investors are hedging against a potential downturn.
“While some believe this crowding could persist,” JPMorgan warns, “we view the current 100th percentile crowding as a broad market warning — it suggests growing complacency in the short term.”
A glance at JPMorgan’s high-beta screen includes two of Cramer’s PARC picks, Palantir and Coinbase, alongside hot retail names like Nvidia, Tesla, and Super Micro Computer.
If this high-beta wave breaks, what should investors do?
History may offer a clue. The low-volatility trade that peaked in April unwound in just three months — also the quickest in three decades. JPMorgan believes it’s setting up for a comeback.
With tariff deadlines looming (August 1), seasonal headwinds, and aggressive positioning, Lakos-Bujas says low-volatility stocks now offer better risk/reward. He recommends rotating into Low Vol Aristocrats, which have underperformed by 19% since April.
Top picks from JPMorgan include:
- Coca-Cola (KO)
- Allegion (ALLE)
- Intercontinental Exchange (ICE)
- CME Group (CME)
- CBOE Global Markets (CBOE)
In a market this frothy, leaning defensive may be the smarter move.
