Comment by vannevar
15 hours ago
>All that an inclusion of these new companies would accomplish is a bailout of their stockholders by pension funds and ETFs where millions of regular people shoulder all the downside risk.
Carvana is the poster child for this. It's astonishing that a company with a history of shady practices, and that has yet to offer a convincing explanation for why it is not a scam, is part of the S&P 500.
Ah, so you'd like the passive broad market index which contains the 500 biggest good companies?
Do tell us if you find one I guess.
To me it's more about how real the financial strength of the company is versus being propped up on some shady accounting. Not sure if that was the case with Carvana or any of these new IPOs, but personally I have my nest egg in the S&P and don't want sharks abusing the index for their pump and dump exit strategy.
No, but how about the 500 that
have been profitable under GAAP accounting rules for at least 12 months
have a public float of at least 10% (so that new investors have some governance rights)
have traded for at least 12 months (and won't have sudden changes in public float or shares available due to lockups and recent listing)
Why is that set of rules particularly good?
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> Ah, so you'd like the passive broad market index which contains the 500 biggest good companies?
And a reminder: not just "good" now, but good over time.
Good companies turn bad (Apple almost went bankrupt), and bad companies can become good (see again Apple; in the UK, recently Rolls-Royce).
Rolls-Royce the luxury car or power plant manufacturer?
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That's what "value funds" do.
But do they historically beat the S&P 500?
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You can just pick stocks - if you pick a fairly low number of large stocks in broad categories with correct weight, you will track the index.
And the relative values of those stocks will shift requiring rebalancing. You might be able to do that with new dollars for a while but hopefully, eventually, the swings are much more than new dollars and then what? Pay capital gains tax on sales to rebalance? Convince yourself the new random allocation is fine?
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I don’t think this is correct. Gains historically accrue to a small number of companies in a given time window. If you buy all the grocery stores, you’re exposed only to sector risk, if you pick one or two, you’re also exposed to the risk those companies don’t contain the “winners”.
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I don't know about the typical HN contributor but I personally lack the cash to but all the stocks in the S&P. There are 503 stocks tracked in the S&P 500 index. It would cost about 2.8 million USD to buy 100 shares (one board lot) of each if you were naive enough to weight your purchases that way. If you were to weight the stocks differently (eg. total market capitalization of each company) the amount would be higher.
Or, I can pick up 100 shares of an index ETF for a few thousand and have someone else do all the work for me including rebalancing and doing all the other required calculations (lot tracking and cost basis calculations etc.).
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ESGV
[flagged]
Im pretty sure Enron was in there in the past as well - 7th largest by revenue... that would make Carvana seem like nothing.
To answer your question honestly though -- the inclusion is mechanical based on criteria not policing based on opinion. Carvana being a history of shady practices is your opinion... (I would agree with you)
My opinion, yes. But if someone said they had invented anit-gravity, then showed you a bowling ball "floating" but with a sheet covering any potential support, you'd be pretty suspicious. And if they refused to remove the sheet, and had previously been convicted of fraud, you'd probably be extremely suspicious. But it would still only be your opinion until the sheet was removed.
But what if your dad had a closely-related sheet company that you regularly transacted with but isn’t public because he was barred for life from giving public demonstrations but owned tons of shares in your demonstration and sold millions of dollars worth on a daily basis?
Surely then it would ease your suspicions…
Please elaborate why caravan is a scam?
See my reply to @rtpg. The short answer is that it is believed they are selling high-risk loans to a company they control, making it look like the publicly traded Carvana is some kind of miracle in the car industry while offloading the risk to anonymous shell companies.
Time will tell if it’s a ponzi or not. I am not fully convinced but it will be interesting to see, the family dynamic is always a bit suspicious and especially how they were at the end of a rope post Covid.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carvana#Controversy
"In January 2025, short-selling investment firm Hindenburg Research published a report titled "Carvana: A Father-Son Accounting Grift For The Ages," in which it disclosed a short position against the company. The report alleged that Carvana's financial turnaround was a "mirage" propped up by accounting manipulation and lax loan underwriting."
"A class-action securities fraud lawsuit is proceeding against Carvana, its founders, executives, and underwriters in the United States District Court for the District of Arizona."
(i have no opinion on the matter, just functioning as your google)
> i have no opinion on the matter, just functioning as your google
If you don’t have anything constructive to add there is zero reason to be a dick.
These are only claims and we will still have to see if the claims become true. Going back to my point it’s hard to say to a fact that it’s a fraudulent company. The financing arm is hardly unique and if they indeed are running a ponzi it would be surprising it could last so long.
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https://hindenburgresearch.com/carvana/
why go that far? herbalife moto is probably "we're a pyramid scheme scam" and they are 45% vs sp500 25% for last 12mo.
you'd better of investing scam500 than sp500 nowadays.
Herbalife has decades of profits from selling wannabe Herbalife distributors a dream of financial independence they'll never achieve though, which might be unethical but is a bit less likely to lose your pension fund money than a company accused of getting 73% of its earnings from a deal with a convicted fraudster...
Whenever someone says nowadays, they're highlighting recency bias. The goals of holding a broad market ETF are diversification leading to sleeping well over the long term (at least to me).
Crime pays. But when you go that far, why stop at investing in scams? Surely you can make money faster by robbing old ladies at knifepoint?
It's a matter of latency vs. throughput.
the discussion is Old Ladies At Knife Point LLC being in the stock exchange and in indexes.
How well do SCAM500 stocks do over a time period that includes two recessions, compared to SP500 ones?
I've no doubt that the short-term gains during a bull market on all sorts of garbage are significant.
what's the argument for it being a scam?
They're an outlier in the industry in terms of profit per car. But they don't actually get revenue from selling cars, their revenue comes from selling car loans. So they're making the additional margin on the financing. They are also famous for not turning down loan applications. So putting the pieces together, it seems like they are selling high risk loans at a healthy profit. Which brings up the question of who is buying those loans. They don't disclose the buyers, but claim that those buyers are not controlled by Carvana or its parent. Given the history of fraud, it's hard to take those claims at face value. The suspicion is that they are selling the loans to family-controlled shell companies and leveraging the stock to finance the scheme.
This is how many businesses operate. You have still not provided example of fraud or scam behavior.
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shady debt offloading onto its sibling financing entity, which is run by Carvana CEO's father, a man convicted of fraud
> a man convicted of fraud
Most practitioners in the field see that as a very strong signal of future fraud.
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> financing entity, which is run by … a man convicted of fraud
I didn’t think that was allowed.
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