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As more money pours into index funds, those index funds need to purchase more shares of stock which are part of the index being tracked. Is it possible that an index fund will be unable to track an index because it is unable buy more shares of a particular stock? If so, what happens?

For example, across all index funds, is it possible that the total amount of money weighted to a stock issued by company X exceeds the market capitalization of X.

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    You read the Bury article, didn't you?
    – acpilot
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 3:12
  • This ? bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-04/…
    – mootmoot
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 9:49
  • I didn't read the linked article...but I also don't understand everything in there...so I can't tell if he's raising this point directly.
    – jayflo
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 12:14

4 Answers 4

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The total amount of money weighted to issued stock can not exceed the market capitalization because the market capitalization IS the value of issued shares.

What you are referring to would be a case of a highly illiquid stock, one that probably doesn't belong in an index fund. If an index fund cannot buy shares, that means there are no sellers, which means there isn't really a market for the stock.

Markets are made by buying and selling activity and 99.99%+ of the time there are both buyers and sellers.

Think about it from the perspective of an individual investor. There is almost always a price at which someone is willing to sell. If you bought AAPL at $200, there is likely a price you would be willing to sell those shares. It may be $300, $500, or $1000, but there is a price. Obviously, this is an extreme example and highly liquid stocks tend to have much tighter spreads (difference between bid and ask prices).

Also, keep in mind that index funds sell positions as well.

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  • The difference between an individual investor and an index fund is that an index fund is bound to track an index. So assuming the market capitalization for a company is constant or increasing, if an index fund gets more investors it must go out and buy more of that company's stock. Personal investors will sell to them, and index funds will pay the price(?) because they only care about matching the index weights. Once index funds as a whole have SO many investors...those index funds would own all the stock.
    – jayflo
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 12:29
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    The price goes up regardless of who buys the stock. If the company feels like the stock is trading far too high considering the intrinsic value they might just issue more stock.
    – xyious
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 19:34
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If you refer to Michael Burry statements about the ETF bubbles and assume that everyone will go buying index ETF.

Logically, I think it is impossible

  • Major shareholders are holding company stock directly
  • Passive Index funds will not manipulate the index
  • There are always people wants to sell the funds like they holding a stock. E.g. balance the portfolio between index funds against stocks or even against a different index.

In fact, what Michael Burry is worry about is the index fund become the hand that pushing the index itself. IMHO, this is somewhat impossible, as a prudent investor should spread their portfolio and hunt for underperformed company stock.

However, this doesn't mean it will not happen, i.e. this is indeed a serious issue in the immatured emerging small country market. This is not happening to those country index fund, but to the small country sovereignty fund Price Keeping operations (PKO, a synonyms abbreviation pun to United nation Peace Keeping Operations). I.e. that sovereignty funds bureaucratic will systematically apply an algorithm to "stabilise" the index.

is it possible that the total amount of money-weighted to a stock issued by company X exceeds the market capitalization of X.

It already happens. Indeed, people will attempt to buy in-advanced on potential gains. Thus you will see some hot company stock trade under very high Price earning ratio. Nevertheless, it cannot goes up indefinitely.

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You're asking what happens when the demand for an item outpaces the supply.

The price of the item (in this case, the prices of the underlying stocks) rise until an equilibrium point is reached.

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    But in this scenario, as the index funds buy, they won't subsequently sell? Over time, the number able to sell will decrease. But the index fund investors just keep investing in the index fund which has to keep buying. At the same time this can drive up the share price...but that wouldn't matter to index funds either, right?
    – jayflo
    Commented Sep 4, 2019 at 22:21
  • @jayflo "as the index funds buy, they won't subsequently sell?" Someone's always selling: needs the money, thinks the market has hit a peak, etc.
    – RonJohn
    Commented Sep 4, 2019 at 22:24
  • @jayflo "but that wouldn't matter to index funds either, right?" What do you mean?
    – RonJohn
    Commented Sep 4, 2019 at 22:25
  • I guess I'm thinking more theoretically. If an index fund gets more investors it has to buy more stock. Non-index-fund will sell to the index funds. Index funds won't sell because they need to buy/hold the stock in order to keep tracking their index. If this continues, the index funds will slowly gather all the stocks (for a particular company). For something like that to happen I'm guessing a lot of money would need to flow into index funds very quickly. In any case, if that can continue, eventually all stocks could be held by index funds so no one can buy/sell.
    – jayflo
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 0:11
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    @jayflo hypothetically that's true. It won't happen any time soon, though. For example, VFIAX owns 152M shares of MSFT. A lot, you say? It's less than 2% of the outstanding shares.
    – RonJohn
    Commented Sep 5, 2019 at 1:30
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Even though the number of shares in a particular company is (in the short term) fixed and finite, the market value of those shares can increase without any bounds if enough people are hell-bent on investing in the company (no matter whether this is because they're index funds or for other reasons).

For example, suppose the current market capitalization of Acme Corp is $1 billion, and there are new investors who have firmly decided to invest $2 billion in Acme, come what might. The resulting scramble to buy shares quickly causes the share price to double, raising market capitalization to $2 billion. All of the new investors get to spend their money on Acme like they wanted to. The previous shareholders sell everything and make a killing -- or if some of them don't, that just causes prices to climb further until the market has absorbed the inflow of money.

(Some of the new investors might have gotten in early enough to buy at the old share price. After the price increase they find that they now have more money in Acme than they decided to have, so they happily sell some of their shares at the new higher price to rebalance, making a profit).

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  • good answer with simple and direct example
    – Raj
    Commented Sep 10, 2019 at 13:39

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