Because the index needs accuracy. If a company is 1-2% of the total US market cap and not included in the index, then the index is wrong right now. The longer this company is not in the index, the longer this error compounds.
In the coming few months, multiple giga-cap companies (SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic) are all planning to IPO. These companies will likely never meet S&P profitability inclusion criteria for the next 5 years. These are not bad companies, but because the S&P inclusion criteria were written for old GAAP profitable companies, and not high-growth companies that invest their cashflow into company growth over profits. Excluding some of the most civilization changing companies from the benchmark means the benchmark is doing a terrible job.
"Because the index needs accuracy.", and I would argue that include price accuracy not just inclusion accuracy. The S&P is a benchmark that is designed to reflect a subset of the market, and giving only some companies early access to the benchmark changes the benchmark. So if you want a benchmark that's designed to include all the big stocks regardless of age, profitability, etc then go make a new benchmark. The only thing you need to do is convince others to use your benchmark.
"go make a new benchmark" completely ignores how this works in practice. Benchmarks are only useful because everyone uses the same one, you can't swap it out. The S&P 500 benchmark is used as a comparison for trillions of dollars of mutual funds, index funds, and institutional mandates. The further the S&P 500 strays from reflecting the actual market, the more useless it becomes.
Also the S&P criteria have been revised multiple times, it's not some sacred unchangeable document.
> The further the S&P 500 strays from reflecting the actual market, the more useless it becomes.
Here I once again agree with you in part, and disagree in part.
The S&P 500 should reflect the actual market. That is, the actual market of publicly-traded companies with legal requirements for transparent accounting and reasonable expectations of future positive cash flows.
As you wrote yourself (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48408363), "These [mega-cap IPO] companies will likely never meet S&P profitability inclusion criteria for the next 5 years."
At this point in time, I don't think it's reasonable to expect future positive cash flows from SpaceX or Anthropic. There are indeed some reasons to suspect that there won't be future positive cash flows from them.
You want to turn S&P 500 to a total market index. Why? That was never its purpose.
No? Where did I say that?
The purpose of the S&P 500 is to be the "best single gauge of U.S. large-cap equities". That's direct from their website. I never dispute this.
I dispute the fact they claim to be the best benchmark of large-cap U.S. equities, yet have rules that (currently) exclude large-cap equities like SpaceX, OpenAI, or Anthropic.
Sure, but then it comes down to your opinion vs the S&P board's opinion. I suspect (given that there's only been a few days of this getting into the public eye) that more people support the S&P's position vs their critics. But the trade flows will show if people get out of SPX (or SPY/VOO) in the coming days.
My issue is that so many people have forgotten the purpose of the S&P 500 index (i.e. it's a benchmark to reflect the large-cap U.S. equity market), and instead treat it as a list of approved companies they should blindly invest their 401ks into. These people do not want to invest their retirement funds into the upcoming IPOs of the overpriced & unprofitable (SpaceX, Anthropic, OpenAI), and then are arguing the benchmark index should not include these companies.
But at a fundamental level, the S&P500 index exists to track the market. It was created decades before passive investing even existed. These companies are all large enough to qualify as major members of the index. If S&P started arbitrarily excluding parts of the market they find uninvestable, then that's compromising the integrity of the index, and defeats the purpose of the index entirely.
Reading this thread, there is so much confusion happening.
> If S&P started arbitrarily excluding parts of the market they find uninvestable, then that's compromising the integrity of the index, and defeats the purpose of the index entirely.
But they haven't started arbitrarily excluding parts of the market they find investable: on the contrary you are demanding they start arbitrarily change a long established and pretty basic rule to arbitrarily include pre-profit companies. Criteria on non market cap factors including positive earnings and liquidity are defined explicitly on their website along with the subjective "best gauge", which is entirely compatible with the idea it's a better gauge of large market cap company performance if it only includes companies whose market cap is supported by having given the bare minimum indication their business model can be financially sustained, not the ventures whose potential is most hyped[1]
[1]which obviously applies to OpenAI and Anthropic to a greater extent than SpaceX which actually achieved positive earnings as a private company before it pivoted to a model which bankrolls other Elon ventures and ambitions and needed to IPO as a result.
That's a fair point that the inclusion criteria are applied consistently, not arbitrarily. But I fundamentally disagree with their inclusion criteria. It was designed for traditional companies with low growth and high GAAP profitability, not high-growth companies rapidly reinvesting into the core business.
Amazon is infamous for having positive cash-flow yet running near-zero GAAP earnings for nearly two decades, because they reinvested absolutely all profits into the business. They were famously unprofitable, by choice of Jeff Bezos, and he created one of the most successful businesses ever. Under your logic, Amazon didn't belong in the index for most of its most important growth years. Only when it became GAAP profitable, it was allowed to enter.
SpaceX is cash-flow positive in its core launch business. OpenAI and Anthropic have tens of billions in revenue. These companies have found product-market-fit, and clearly demonstrate working business models. But neither of these companies satisfy one specific accounting metric that the S&P 500 requires for inclusion, so they get shafted.
The market has already priced these companies at giga-cap levels, these are some of the largest companies ever created, and that is a clear signal of something. The benchmark index should include these companies in some form, rather than gate them behind an antiquated metric.
I don't think earnings is an antiquated metric for valuing companies though. Other metrics exist to estimate future earnings and attract a different class of investor looking for different risk/return profiles than people wanting to index companies big enough to generate steady returns with fairly high confidence they'll be doing a similar thing tomorrow. If people want to invest in a different type of company from the companies the index was designed to capture they're entitled to do so: if their expected returns are that good you don't need to browbeat indices into changing their entire ethos to get funds involved in their IPO.
Sure, some companies which vastly outspent competitors on growth became very successful profitable midcaps and joined the relevant indices when they did, but everyone else waited their turn (including the ones that never became profitable midcaps because the money tap was their moat)
You can just buy the stock, you know. Nobody is keeping it off the exchanges. Or you can buy another fund that includes it.
> But at a fundamental level, the S&P500 index exists to track the market
No, it exists to track a subset of the market based on specific criteria and weights. It's not even based on the market cap of included companies directly.
'S&P Total Market Index' exists to track the market.
> qualify as major members of the index
Not based on the inclusion criteria.
AND even if that were changed they wouldn't be near the top anyway, despite the trillion dollar valuations initially they wouldn't even be in the top 20 by weight.
> and defeats the purpose of the index entirely.
The index has operated based on specific rules defining inclusion criteria for a while. Can we just conclude that it did not become the most popular index despite never being designed to track the full market or be based directly on total market caps.
After all it's the people advocating the inclusion of these companies are advocating an arbitrary modification to the rules just to get them in.
The "total market index" point has been addressed twice now. Nobody ever claimed the S&P 500 tracks all equities. Only you keep bringing it up.
On your claim that these companies "wouldn't be in the top 20 by weight": as I addressed to you other times in this thread, SpaceX float 1 year after IPO would be 50%, giving it an index weight of $800 billion. That places it easily in the top 20 large-cap U.S. companies. The article linked has a chart of forecast free float. Your claim is false.
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2026/06/01/c...
On "arbitrary modification" of rules: every criterion in the index was itself added or revised at some point. The profitability requirement, the float threshold, the dual-class share exclusion then reinclusion. All these rules were modified. If all rule changes are "arbitrary," so are the existing rules. The only meaningful standard for evaluating a rule change is whether it better serves the index's stated purpose.
The stated purpose of the S&P500 is to be the "best single gauge of U.S. large-cap equities." A company with a $1.75T market cap that ranks in the top 5 by size in the US is, by definition, large-cap. Excluding such a large company is contrary to the stated purpose of the index.
> Where did I say [I want to turn S&P 500 to a total market index]?
Right here:
> Because the index needs accuracy. If a company is 1-2% of the total US market cap and not included in the index, then the index is wrong right now.
If it's not a total US market index, then why is the index wrong to not include it?
Edit: and then again here:
> But at a fundamental level, the S&P500 index exists to track the market.
There are indexes which explicitly try to capture the entire market- the Russell 3000 is most prominent, but the Wiltshire 5000 is another one, and Vanguard's Total Market Funds and ETF follow the CRSP US Total Market Index. I believe all of them plan to include SpaceX/OpenAI etc. within a few weeks of its listing, which is what I'd expect from their goal of tracking the total market. Other indexes follow just a few stocks- most famously, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (built during an era of when it had to be calculated by hand every night) looks at just 30 stocks in a weird way(1).
The S&P 500 isn't either of those. It has a list of criteria for inclusion, one of which is profitability. They are sticking with that criteria. If you don't like it, sell your VOO and buy VTI instead.
1: It is essentially impossible to build an index that tracks the DJIA because, since it was done on pencil and paper, it isn't actually market-cap weighted, but is share price weighted, with a correction factor for each stock to account for splits, one stock replacing another, etc. Because of that nature, the weights of the DJIA change minute by minute, so someone attempting to track it would be subject to enormous error.
> Because the index needs accuracy
So you are saying that S&P 500 should be merged with Russell 2000 or rather just become a fully market index to be more "accurate". You do know that's something that exists already, having different indexes makes perfect sense and consumers can pick the ones they want based on their risk profile and preferences.
> most civilization changing companies from the benchmark
It took Google 2 years to get into S&P 500. For Microslop it was 8 years (!). So what's new?
I am saying none of those things. S&P claims their S&P500 index is the "best single gauge of U.S. large-cap equities". That's taken directly from their website.
I dispute this claim, because the (current) rules for S&P500 inclusion exclude companies like SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI. All of these companies are planning to IPO this year, and even if these companies maintain their present valuation for a year, none are eligible for S&P 500. Due to profitability requirements.
Yet these are all U.S. large-cap companies, among the top 20 largest in the U.S., and by S&P's description of the index, should be included. Not including these companies makes the index inaccurate.
> [Google and Microsoft took years go get into the index], so what's new?
Because SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI are $1T+ companies. Google and Microsoft were much smaller relative to the size of the index when they joined.
Best single gauge, not summary. Systematically excluding companies that are large and buzzy yet not profitable is a matter of intentional design to improve the accuracy of the gauge, even if previous companies were not quite this large. Anthropic and OpenAI are great illustrations of why you might want such a design: the bull case for each is that they're going to dunk the other and become the US's primary provider of AI inference, and neither is yet profitable, so by including both of them in the index you're "double counting" investor expectations of how valuable a company producing profitable AI inference will be.
Maybe you know this already, but this reads like exactly the kind of reasoning that people looking back at irrational market euphorias point to as a sign things were about to go awry.
The purpose of a benchmark is to reflect the market. If the US economy is pumping out high-growth but overpriced & unprofitable companies via IPOs, at unreasonable valuations, the benchmark should reflect that.
It's not S&P's fault this is happening.
On the contrary. There are many benchmarks, some small subset of which are intended to reflect the whole market.
There are indices for every little thematic and niche corner or strategy or idea, there are broad-as-possible indices, and there are indices with requirements like listed age and profitability.
I'm not debating any of that. This discussion is about the S&P500 as a benchmark, which has an expressly stated purpose of tracking large-cap US equities.
This discussion is about if S&P500 actually achieves this benchmark, when it has (antiquated) rules that exclude large-cap US companies of the likes of SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI.
Benchmarks are governed (to some extent) by natural selection. If the S&P criteria prove obsolete, then it will be replaced by other indices that use your proposed criteria. Everything's going to be just fine.
> If a company is 1-2% of the total US market cap and not included in the index, then the index is wrong right now.
To be clear, S&P 500 relies on float, not total US Market Cap, and Space X will have a tiny float.
Even if it was included, SpaceX would not account for 1-2% of the S&P 500 (more like 0.1%), so even if we reason on the basis of a benchmark, it's not a meaningful difference.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48407542
Thanks, but should I conclude you agree with my point?
Even if he did, it seems he would keep arguing regardless.
No, because after lockups expire in 6 months, SpaceX float would increase to 40-50% and it's float-adjusted weight would be >1% of S&P. This is assuming share prices remain unchanged, when they could go either way.
SpaceX at its current valuation places it as one of the 5 largest companies by market cap in the US.
> Because the index needs accuracy.
No, it doesn't. At least, not the way you are probably defining it.
This sounds to me like you may be trying to use the index for something it's not really meant to be used for.
What is the S&P 500 meant for then? It was created in 1957 as a benchmark of US equity performance. That's S&P Global's own stated purpose. If it's systematically excluding companies that represent significant chunks of total US market cap, the index isn't doing its job.
Investment funds are for making money. Nobody cares about 'accurately reflecting the state of the market' if that's objectionably high-risk. You invest in an investment fund to make money.
There is no way you can commit to holding big quantities of these methane bubble swamp gas companies and claim it isn't high risk. You'd have to be certain you could bail at the right moment, and that doing so would not obliterate the market through your giant market move… or commit to being a giant bubble of fraud that can never possibly blow up, forever.
These are not responsible ways to make vast sums of money, not because they're unethical but because they're gambles at very high stakes.
You are confused what the S&P 500 actually is. It is a benchmark, not a managed fund. Investment funds that track the S&P 500 do not have a say on which stocks to buy. They copy what the index allocates. Whether these companies allocated are risky or not, has no relevance to if the benchmark accurately represents the US equity market. If three of the top 10 largest companies in the U.S. are excluded from the index, which may be the situation this year, then the benchmark is wrong. The benchmark is failing to achieve its stated function.
Your risk argument applies to actively managed funds, not to an index whose entire purpose is to represent the U.S. large-cap market.
Nobody cares whether the benchmark is no longer accurate (or whether it was accurate in the first place). People are furious because their investment allocation is tied to this rule change. If you or anyone wants an orignalist SnP number that accurately (by whatever standard you want it to be) benchmarks the market, you are free to do so very easily.
If they are methane swamp bubble giant frauds (there can be others: for instance, Enron, historically) then they don't count as companies for the purposes of the S&P 500. Methods for determining this might include the metrics the S&P 500 elected not to waive…
But it is not 1-2% of the total US market cap, is it?
It aspires to be that way. The market decides, and it hasn’t decided yet.
Am I missing something?
> If a company is 1-2% of the total US market cap
Over what time horizon should that number be computed? Every day? Every second? Every month/quarter?
It is not as simple as it seems.
I'm with you on this part:
> Because the index needs accuracy. If a company is 1-2% of the total US market cap and not included in the index, then the index is wrong right now. The longer this company is not in the index, the longer this error compounds. In the coming few months, multiple giga-cap companies (SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic) are all planning to IPO.
I'm nodding vigorously on this part:
> These companies will likely never meet S&P profitability inclusion criteria for the next 5 years.
But here, you lose me…
> These are not bad companies, but because the S&P inclusion criteria were written for old GAAP profitable companies, and not high-growth companies that invest their cashflow into company growth over profits. Excluding some of the most civilization changing companies from the benchmark means the benchmark is doing a terrible job.
The point of investing in a total(ish) index of the public stock market is to invest in companies that have a reasonable expectation of net-positive future cash flows, justified in part by legally-mandated transparent reporting of their finances.
You can't just buy every publicly-traded stock though: for one thing, that would massively incentivize obvious scammers to do the bare minimum to get their stocks included, and drag the index down. Avoiding companies that are illiquid, non-transparent, or lacking in a clear track record is important. The SpaceX IPO bears more than a passing resemblance to a pump-and-dump scheme:
1. SpaceX's line of business* is tremendously unclear.
2. SpaceX doesn't actually need external capital to fund its operations.
3. SpaceX is floating only a tiny fraction of its putative market capitalization.
4. The main purpose of the IPO appears to be to allow insiders to cash out.
5. The way the lion's share of the IPO gets sold is if large index funds and pension-holding companies demand shares, and that only happens with the index-inclusion exceptions we're discussing here.
So, we agree that these "mega cap IPO" companies won't be profitable in the next 5 years. That's a huge period of time. How can public markets accurately value a company that isn't expected to be profitable for such a long period of time; there are so many things that could change their trajectory towards profitability, all the more so if we accept your premise that these companies are "civilization changing."
My conclusion is that it's perfectly fine, even beneficial, for indices like S&P 500 to avoid any special treatment for these companies. If SpaceX is clearly profitable 5 years from now, and has reached 50% free-float, that seems like a good time to start including it in the index.
---
* Nearly all of its revenue comes from launching satellites and running a satellite-based communications network, but much of its putative valuation comes from a hastily glommed-in also-ran AI company, and its association with a person who is famous for running other businesses and for political connections.
> These companies will likely never meet S&P profitability inclusion criteria for the next 5 years.
They won't stay gigacaps for 5 years if they don't become profitable. At their size, they can't just keep burning money at that scale under the public's eyes. The funding will divert from VC to shareholder equity and that will quickly see they don't stay gigacaps.
So this is a self correcting problem. Either they'll start making money and hit profitability targets or their market cap will diminish.
If they're doomed, they're bad companies. This isn't complicated. You can run a fraud and double down real aggressively and as long as you're not called on your bullshit you look incredibly good, until you don't.
If they're doomed, they're bad companies. You can make the argument they're not doomed, but that's a separate argument.