The Sectors page
How the market is grouped — and what you can do here.
Why sectors matter
The U.S. market is split into 11 broad sectors — Technology, Healthcare, Financials, Energy and so on. Stocks in the same sector tend to rise and fall together because they're affected by the same economic forces.
Looking at sectors gives you the big-picture view: which parts of the economy are doing well, which aren't, and where you might want to focus or avoid.
Reading the tiles
Each tile shows one sector. Tap any of them for the deep-dive.
The performance number
The green or red number on each tile is how the sector has performed over the chosen period (Week / Month / Year). Switch the period using the segmented control above the tiles.
Big positive numbers (green) = the sector has been winning. Big negative numbers (red) = it's been struggling.
The market-share line
"~28% of market" means roughly that percentage of the U.S. stock market value is in companies in this sector. Technology is the biggest slice; Utilities and Real Estate are among the smallest.
The ETF code (e.g. XLK)
Every sector has a popular ETF that tracks it — buy that ETF and you own a slice of every company in the sector. The code on the tile (XLK for Technology, XLE for Energy, etc.) is that ETF's ticker.
The sector deep-dive
Tap any sector tile to open a deep-dive page for that sector.
Top stocks in the sector
The leading stocks within the sector, ranked by Fundamental Score. Tap any row to open that stock's full card.
The sector ETF
The main ETF for the sector — tap to see it as a full card (silver-trimmed), including its top holdings and breakdowns.
🔒 Premium add-ons
With Premium you also see: where money is flowing across sectors over the past month, whether the sector is expensive compared with its own history, which sectors move together (for diversification), and a 2-year history chart.
Important
Sectors are useful context, not a buy or sell signal on their own. A great sector can have bad companies in it; a struggling sector can have hidden gems. Always check the individual stock too. Full disclaimer →