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Uber stock (UBER) finished the day 2.2% up on Monday after news crossed late Friday that the company would be joining the S&P 500.
The mechanics behind this move aren't hard to sort out — with over $7 trillion tracking the index, there are a large number of forced buyers of the stock, namely the fund sponsors offering investors ETFs, mutual funds, or other products that seek to match the S&P 500.
In a note to clients on Monday, Jefferies analyst John Colantuoni noted the average jump in shares of a company added to the S&P 500 has been 6.3% from the close before the announcement to the open the next day, and 11.2% between the announcement and when shares joined in the index. Early on Monday, Uber stock gained as much as 6%.
S&P's announcement also serves as a milestone for a company that was one of the defining names — for better and for worse — of the 2010s venture boom.
Joining an index that, in S&P's own words, is "considered to be a proxy of the U.S. equity market" means that when the public refers to "the stock market" going forward, they will now be referring to a group that includes Uber.
And as ever, these shifts are a reminder that investors buying ETFs, mutual funds, or other products that track the S&P 500 aren't being as passive as the moniker "passive investing" implies.
Read more: How to start investing: A step-by-step guide
As TKer's Sam Ro has chronicled, there have been more than 700 changes to the S&P 500 since 1995. In other words, more than all of the members of the index have turned over since the end of the first Clinton administration.
Of course, over that time, many companies have been stalwarts in the index — Coca-Cola (KO), Microsoft (MSFT), and Walmart (WMT), to name a few.
But with this year's market rally being defined by the "Magnificent Seven" stocks — which alongside Microsoft include Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), Tesla (TSLA), and Nvidia (NVDA) — it's worth noting how recently some of these market leaders have been added to the index.
For Tesla, that honor was granted in 2020. Meta joined under its former banner of Facebook back in 2013. And Amazon was added in 2005.
Over the years, many investors "passively" buying funds tracking the S&P 500 have likely been doing so in an effort to stay away from the investing fads of the day. But trends are different than fads.