When Mega-IPOs Test the Rules, Investors Should Focus on Quality
2026’s wave of mega-IPOs is raising a question many investors may not have spent much time thinking about: how exactly does a company get added to a major stock market index?
On its face, the answer may seem fairly simple. A large company goes public, trades actively, and eventually makes its way into major benchmarks. But in practice, index inclusion is not automatic, which is a key consideration now that several large private companies are expected to go public at massive valuations—ranking them among the biggest public companies in the United States.1
And in an interesting and meaningful twist for investors, index providers like Russell, Nasdaq, and S&P are all addressing the index inclusion question differently.
Nasdaq has, somewhat controversially, moved toward faster inclusion, allowing newly listed companies to enter the Nasdaq-100 within 15 trading days if their market capitalization ranks among the top 40 current constituents. This criterion essentially gives SpaceX an automatic bid, for instance, even though the company is not yet profitable. FTSE Russell has also moved toward faster inclusion for very large IPOs. S&P Dow Jones, by contrast, recently decided not to waive its S&P 500 requirements around profitability, public trading history, and float.
Why Diversification Matters in Volatile Markets
Markets change, and so do the investments inside many index funds. That’s why it’s important for investors to understand their portfolio exposures and make sure they remain aligned with their long-term goals.
Our free guide, Navigating Market Volatility2, explores the role diversification can play in managing portfolio risk and helping investors stay focused during periods of market uncertainty. Download it to learn:
- Sharp market declines and corrections are a normal part of investing
- The best market days come unexpectedly (often within days or weeks of the worst days)
- Trying to pick market tops and bottoms is nearly impossible
- Trust your strategy and discipline, not the headlines
- Plus, more insights and assistance to help you keep your investment strategy on course
If you have $500,000 or more to invest, get your free volatility guide today!
Download Your Free Copy Today: Navigating Market Volatility: 4 Principles for Staying the Course2
This does not mean one index provider is right and another is wrong. Indexes are built for different purposes, and methodology choices reflect those purposes. For investors, the important point is to understand that the rules are changing, and those rules can affect what investors own.
The S&P 500, for example, is not simply a list of the 500 largest companies in America. It has eligibility requirements, including liquidity, public float, U.S. domicile, and a profitability screen. To qualify, a company generally needs positive GAAP earnings in its most recent quarter and over the sum of the prior four quarters. It also needs to have been publicly traded long enough to establish a public-market record. These criteria would keep SpaceX, Anthropic, and Open AI out in the near term.
Investors should also understand that headline valuation and index weight are not the same thing. A company may come public at a valuation near $1.75 trillion, but if less than 5% of its shares are freely tradable, most float-weighted indexes will not treat it like a $1.75 trillion holding on day one. Float-adjusted indexes typically weight companies based on the shares available to public investors, not shares still held by insiders, founders, employees, or strategic backers.
That can make the initial impact of a mega-IPO more limited than many investors might assume.
The larger impact may come later, however. After an IPO, insiders are often subject to lockup agreements that restrict selling for a period of time. When those lockups expire, more shares become available to the market. If a company’s float rises substantially over time, its float-adjusted index weight can also rise substantially, even if the stock price does not change. In other words, the index impact of a mega-IPO may not happen all at once. It can unfold in stages as more shares become available and index providers rebalance. Investors should track these changes closely over time.
So, what does this all mean for everyday investors?
In my view, it means investors need to look beneath the label of the index or fund they own, because the composition of an index can shift over time and sometimes in ways investors may not fully appreciate. A fund that appears broadly diversified may gradually become more concentrated in a smaller group of companies, sectors, or themes if those companies keep growing and the index methodology assigns them larger weights.
This is especially important when market leadership is already concentrated. Market-cap-weighted indexes naturally give more influence to the largest companies. When new mega-cap companies enter the public markets—particularly companies tied to the same growth themes already driving investor enthusiasm—portfolio exposure can shift further in that direction.
At the end of the day, true diversification is not just owning a fund with hundreds of holdings. It is understanding how those holdings are weighted, what risks they share, and whether the total portfolio is still aligned with the investor’s goals. A portfolio can look diversified on the surface while still carrying meaningful exposure to a handful of dominant companies or a single powerful market narrative.
Bottom Line for Investors
As index providers adjust to a world where companies stay private longer and come public at much larger valuations, investors should pay attention to the rules. Different benchmarks may reach different conclusions about when and how to include these companies, and those differences can affect portfolio exposure.
Investors do not need to study every rule change in every benchmark, but they should understand the benchmarks they rely on and the role each one plays in the portfolio. Index rules influence portfolio exposures, and portfolio exposures influence risk.
Index methodologies may change, but the fundamentals of investing do not: stay diversified, focus on the long term, and avoid reacting to short-term noise.
Our guide, Navigating Market Volatility3, explores how investors can maintain that perspective during periods of market uncertainty. It covers:
- Sharp market declines and corrections are a normal part of investing
- The best market days come unexpectedly (often within days or weeks of the worst days)
- Trying to pick market tops and bottoms is nearly impossible
- Trust your strategy and discipline, not the headlines
- Plus, more insights and assistance to help you keep your investment strategy on course
If you have $500,000 or more to invest, access your free volatility guide today.
Disclosure
1 Wall Street Journal. June 5, 2026. https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/stock-indexes-are-divided-on-rules-for-megacap-ipos-how-exposed-will-you-be-31818da1
2 Zacks Investment Management reserves the right to amend the terms or rescind the free Navigating Market Volatility: 4 Principles for Staying the Course offer at any time and for any reason at its discretion.
3 Zacks Investment Management reserves the right to amend the terms or rescind the free Navigating Market Volatility: 4 Principles for Staying the Course offer at any time and for any reason at its discretion.
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