Nasdaq is expected to announce changes to the Nasdaq-100 Index on Friday, which could be about more than just prestige for the companies that earn entry.
The reconstitution can be an important development for certain companies and their shareholders, because large funds that track the index will buy the newly added stocks. Those funds will also sell shares of companies that exit the index.
The Nasdaq-100 Index NDX is made up of the largest 100 nonfinancial companies in the full Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, which itself has 3,284 components. The index is reconstituted annually and rebalanced quarterly to weight the components by market capitalization, subject to limits described here.
When the index is reconstituted each December, it is weighted by the companies’ Nov. 30 combined market capitalization for all of their eligible common-share classes. In recent years, the announcement has come on the second Friday of December, with the changes taking hold later in the month.
The largest exchange-traded fund tracking the Nasdaq-100 is the $322 billion Invesco QQQ Trust QQQ. While Alphabet Inc. is one component of the Nasdaq-100, QQQ holds both the company’s Class A GOOGL and Class C GOOG shares, which together make up 5.1% of the ETF’s portfolio.
In case you are wondering, QQQ has returned 30% for 2024 through Wednesday, just ahead of a 29.2% return for the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust SPY. Total returns in this article include reinvested dividends.
To see which companies might be added to the Nasdaq-100 Index or removed from it for this year’s reconstitution, we looked at combined market capitalizations for all publicly traded common share classes for the entire Nasdaq Composite Index as of Nov. 30, as calculated by FactSet. Then we removed companies in financial-services industries and sorted the remaining list by market cap.
Among the largest 100 nonfinancial companies in the full Nasdaq Composite Index, these 11 aren’t currently in the Nasdaq-100 Index. They are sorted by Nov. 30 market cap:
Company |
Ticker |
Market cap. as of Nov. 30 ($mil) |
2024 total return through Dec. 11 |
Palantir Technologies Inc. |
PLTR |
$146,278 |
322% |
Sanofi ADR |
SNY |
$123,422 |
-1% |
Equinix Inc. |
EQIX |
$94,701 |
23% |
MicroStrategy Inc. Class A |
MSTR |
$79,445 |
551% |
Netease Inc. ADR |
NTES |
$55,657 |
7% |
JD.com Inc. ADR |
JD |
$53,572 |
36% |
Axon Enterprise Inc. |
AXON |
$49,334 |
149% |
Trip.com Group Ltd. ADR |
TCOM |
$44,063 |
102% |
Argenx SE ADR |
ARGX |
$37,389 |
59% |
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Inc. |
ALNY |
$32,641 |
33% |
United Airlines Holdings Inc. |
UAL |
$31,845 |
140% |
Source: FactSet |
Palantir Technologies PLTR tops the list with a market cap of $146 billion after its shares have more than quadrupled this year. The company is newly eligible for the Nasdaq-100 as it switched over to the Nasdaq from the New York Stock Exchange toward the end of November. At the time it announced the planned switch of its exchange, Palantir said it anticipated Nasdaq-100 inclusion, and shares popped.