The Russell US Indexes reconstitution that we previewed earlier this month officially took effect at the close of trading Friday, and US markets opened this morning, Monday June 29, with the newly recalibrated indexes in operation. The timing is notable. Just last week we wrote about the market rotation finally broadening beyond a handful of mega cap technology names and into small caps — and this reconstitution is the structural machinery that formalizes exactly that shift, recalibrating which companies sit in which index after a year of dramatic movement across the market cap spectrum.
After a query period, a lock-down phase, and one of the highest-volume trading sessions of the year on Friday, the 2026 reconstitution is now complete — and the changes offer a revealing snapshot of how the US equity market has evolved over the past twelve months.
A Market That Grew 29% in a Year
The headline figure is the scale of the market’s expansion. The total market capitalization of the Russell 3000 — the broad index designed to capture roughly 98% of the investable US equity market — rose 29% from $58.4 trillion at last year’s reconstitution to $75.6 trillion as of the April 30 rank day. That growth rippled through every layer of the index family. The market capitalization breakpoint separating large-cap companies in the Russell 1000 from small-cap companies in the Russell 2000 increased 24% to $5.7 billion. At the lower boundary, the smallest company in the Russell 2000 now carries a market cap of approximately $146 million, up nearly 23% from a year ago.
A Historic Shakeup at the Top
One of the most striking changes occurred among the largest companies in the index. For more than a decade, Apple and Microsoft traded places as the two largest US companies. This year broke that pattern. Driven by the artificial intelligence boom, Nvidia rose from third place in 2025 to become the largest company in both the Russell 3000 and Russell 1000, while Alphabet climbed from fifth to second. Apple and Microsoft slipped to third and fourth. It is the clearest index-level evidence yet of how completely AI has reshaped market leadership.
The Small Cap Story Beneath the Surface
For ChannelChek’s audience, the more relevant action is happening lower down the market cap spectrum. A total of 237 companies were added to the Russell 2000 this cycle, with additions concentrated most heavily in health care, followed by technology, industrials, and consumer discretionary. That cohort includes 82 companies migrating up from the Russell Microcap Index, 37 moving down from the Russell 1000, and 101 newly eligible entrants joining from outside the Russell universe. Seventeen IPOs were added directly to the small cap index, led by eight health care names.
The reconstitution also revealed the strength of the recent small cap surge through its banding mechanism. A remarkable 97 existing Russell 2000 constituents ranked above the large cap breakpoint based on market cap but remained in the small cap index because they fell within the retention band — a buffer designed to reduce unnecessary turnover. That is an unusually high number, and it reflects just how many small cap companies have appreciated toward large cap territory over the past year.
Why the Semi-Annual Shift Matters Going Forward
This reconstitution carries lasting structural significance because 2026 marks the first time since 1989 that FTSE Russell has moved to a semi-annual schedule. A second reconstitution will now occur in December, and the implications are real. With roughly $12 trillion in assets benchmarked to Russell indexes, the addition of a December rebalance means that companies growing rapidly into or shrinking out of an index will be repositioned far faster than the prior annual cadence allowed.
For active small cap managers, that change raises the stakes around benchmark awareness and risk management. Stocks that appreciate quickly can now be migrated to a new index in months rather than waiting a full year, compressing the window in which fundamental changes get reflected in index composition. For investors, the practical takeaway is that index inclusion remains a powerful driver of passive fund flows and liquidity — but inclusion is not the same as fundamental validation. A company can join an index and still carry execution, dilution, or earnings risk. The reconstitution list is best understood as a map of where benchmark-driven attention may flow, not a substitute for due diligence.
The rebalanced indexes are live. The market they represent looks materially different than it did a year ago — larger at the top, broader beneath the surface, and now recalibrated twice as often as it was for the prior 37 years.