VanEck executive: Block is expected to become the first company in the S&P 500 to hold Bitcoin

PANews reported on January 10 that Matthew Sigel, head of digital asset research at VanEck, posted on the X platform that the financial technology company Block is expected to become the first company in the S&P 500 to hold Bitcoin. For a stock to be included in the index, it must meet six major criteria, including: 1) a market value of more than $18 billion; 2) more than 10% of public shares; 3) earnings in the most recent quarter should be positive, and the sum of GAAP earnings in the previous four quarters should also be positive; 4) high liquidity; 5) listed for at least 12 months; 6) the company is headquartered in the United States.

Block meets the last criterion (earnings) after the release of its first quarter earnings in 2024. However, inclusion in the S&P 500 is not strictly based on a formula, but is determined at the discretion of the index committee. Historically, companies that meet all the requirements have been included within 3 to 21 months (LULU is a special case, which took 65 months).

Sector diversification is one of the factors that the index committee considers, and they aim to maintain a sector composition that is roughly consistent with sector economics. The phrase "consistent with sector economics" is not clearly defined, so the S&P Total Market Index can be used as a reference: Financials currently account for 13.9% of the S&P 500, while it accounts for 14.6% of the broader index, which suggests that there is still room for financials to increase.

Share to:

Author: PA一线

This content is for market information only and is not investment advice.

Follow PANews official accounts, navigate bull and bear markets together
PANews APP
Solana Treasury subsidiary Upexi's net loss widened to $109 million in the third fiscal quarter.
PANews Newsflash