| ▲ | edoceo 8 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Is this grey cause it's wrong? They are all on Nasdaq; and also around 35% of S&P. What am I missing? Is it that the "Most indexes" part is wrong (cause there are more than a few thousand ETF)? | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | exmadscientist 7 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Yeah, it's wrong. Nasdaq, Inc. is a company with a stock market ("the NASDAQ") and an index "Nasdaq 100"). They want SpaceX to be listed on their market, because they like having more things on their market for all the usual reasons. They are, apparently, offering to manipulate their index to win the listing. Accordingly, anything that uses or tracks this particular index (Nasdaq 100), such as the QQQ fund, will potentially have to pay for this manipulation. Anybody not holding or indexing to the Nasdaq 100 index contents will not particularly care and will not really gain or lose any more money than on an ordinary trading day. In particular, this will have zero effect on stocks that merely trade on the NASDAQ exchange. Indexing to the Nasdaq 100 is pretty uncommon, outside of QQQ, so most people will not care. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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