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by inv13 1999 days ago
I feel like every 2nd man on planet earth bought TSLA at this point. When they did a 5to1 split, the price just doubled, giving birth to around 250bn$, just like that. Seemingly without anything significant happening around Tesla. I cant help but think that people only want more, and the amount of people who feel the same way are reached another peak. The last time splitting has this big of an effect on the price, was in the dot com bubble. I hope I'm wrong.
1 comments

> I feel like every 2nd man on planet earth bought TSLA at this point.

Now that it's been added to SPY you might not be wrong, it's very possible more than half of investors own shares in TSLA one way or another.

I wonder if there's a market for a financial product that looked at your ETF holdings and allowed you to cancel out a particular instrument. I don't have the appetite to be net short, but there are stocks I'd like to negate my ownership of.
Thanks to automation, fractional shares and zero commissions, "direct indexing" is a thing now. You can track an index of your own design instead of trying to cancel out positions.
Interesting, thanks for the pointer to that phrase, I'm reading up on it now.

Are there products that make it easy to do this? I imagine it would be theoretically possible but incredibly time-consuming to keep up with SPY by manually trading on RobinHood!

I believe the products that make it easy are currently only available through financial advisors, and for high net worth clients. But the demand seems to be there, so something accessible to the average retail investor may appear in the next few years.
This is a really intriguing idea! You would of course run into the issue that that product would appear to have horrible returns right up until the rug gets pulled out, and liquidity might be an issue (margin for the short would have to be provided and presumably could not be directly provided by the long positions). But at the very least one could theoretically write something which could take in a portfolio of ETF positions and output "short this much ABC and XYZ to be net flat in those stocks."