(I also don't want them to create special exceptions. The S&P 500 has pre-existing inclusion criteria, and I'm glad they're sticking to their rules.)
OK, then put your money in VTI/VTSAX instead of a S&P 500 fund. I own some VTI and also some FXAIX, you can do the same thing and choose which index to buy.
That's like saying that if Nvidia performs way better than an index fund, then the index fund will shift to consist only of Nvidia.
In any given year, there are plenty of index funds that outperform the S&P 500. They don't freak out over it.
S&P 500 is volatile over 5 years - I'd argue even over 10 years (see the charts at https://blog.nawaz.org/posts/2015/Dec/pay-down-mortgage-or-i...). The whole point of investing in it is for much longer windows.
So yeah, perhaps after 10 years they'll change once they'll see other index funds doing better, and have data to back up that in the long term, early inclusion didn't hurt.
Any individual can buy as much as they want.
I'm not disagreeing that people invest this way, but I'd like to point out that past performance does not imply future performance, and that investors should consider factors other than just past returns.
> To join the S&P 500, a company must demonstrate positive GAAP net income in both its most recent quarter and the sum of the trailing four consecutive quarters
Anyway, if other indexes add it, and it fails spectacularly, money will shift to those funds that do better.
Neither SpaceX, OpenAI or Anthropic have a future. What's a shame is that had Elon not merged SpaceX with xAI it might've actually had a future - but he had to go and ruin it.
What an idiot.