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If the S&P adopt those rules would there be any index fund that is S&P without the new rules?


An index fund like the S&P500 is not the S&P500. It is stuck competing in a world of low margin pain.

I sincerely hope S&P and Nasdaq rollback the SpaceX-targeted changes, but unfortunately I seriously doubt it.


Dimensional funds have a type of index factor funds that roughly track these indices without strict adherence to S&Ps inclusion rules. That's the only one I'm aware of.


Vanguard doesn’t use S&P, because they wanted low fees and the license was expensive. They use CRSP’s index rules.

I checked and it looks like new stocks get added to the CRSP index at the next rebalancing, which is September. So, even the knockoff S&P adds it quickly.

BTW, CRSP was run by University of Chicago, but got sold recently to Morningstar, a mutual fund company.


IZZ, or in other words fuck em.




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