#Marvell获纳入标普500 Inclusion in the S&P 500: Short-term catalysts + medium to long-term dividends, a qualitative change in capital dynamics
Inclusion in the S&P 500 is not just a simple index adjustment, but a transformation of Marvell from a growth stock to a value-growth stock, bringing triple benefits of short-term capital support, medium to long-term liquidity, and valuation premiums, while also rationally viewing the short-term volatility expected to be realized.
(1) Short-term: Concentrated passive capital inflows, hedging sharp declines, supporting stock prices
Hundreds of billions of dollars in passive buying: After inclusion, index funds and ETFs tracking the S&P 500 are required to allocate according to weight, resulting in 10-20 billion USD in passive capital inflow, forming strong buying before June 22, short-term suppressing large declines.
Significant liquidity improvement: Post-inclusion, daily trading volume is expected to increase by 30%-50%, making institutional trading more convenient, reducing panic selling pressure, and lowering volatility.
Sentiment boost: Inclusion = official recognition of its AI leadership position by the S&P, combined with Jensen Huang’s endorsement, strengthening market confidence, and increasing short-term rebound potential.
(2) Medium to long-term: Upgrading institutional allocations, continuous valuation premium + capital dividends
Increased institutional shareholding: Transition from “small growth stocks” to “core large-cap tech stocks,” with pension funds, sovereign funds, and large public funds passively/actively increasing holdings, leading to a more stable shareholding structure and reduced valuation volatility.
Rising valuation premium: S&P 500 component stocks generally enjoy a 10%-20% liquidity premium, with Marvell’s high growth + low volatility attributes expected to push its P/E from the current 50+ toward a reasonable range of 60-70, aligning with AI leadership status.
Financing and M&A advantages: Post-inclusion, credit ratings improve, lowering financing costs and broadening financing channels, supporting ongoing acquisitions of cutting-edge AI technologies (such as photonic interconnects, advanced packaging), strengthening technological barriers, and forming a positive cycle of “M&A - Technology - Orders - Growth.”
(3) Rational outlook: Short-term benefits have been partly realized, caution against “buying the rumor and selling the fact”
Expectations overshot: Before the announcement, Jensen Huang’s “trillion” comments + inclusion expectations drove the stock price to surge by 50% in the short term, with some benefits already realized, and potential profit-taking after inclusion.
Systemic risks cannot be fully avoided: The current plunge in US stocks is due to rising interest rates, marginal concerns about AI demand, and chip stocks being overbought. Under systemic risk, Marvell cannot be immune, but its decline is likely smaller than the sector average.
Overall, Marvell’s inclusion in the S&P 500 is a perfect resonance of solid fundamentals, highly certain earnings growth, and index capital dividends. In the short term, passive capital supports hedging against declines, stabilizing after volatility, and outperforming the sector; in the medium term, driven by AI’s dual engines, over 40% high growth will be realized, and valuation will recover to new highs; in the long term, the AI interconnectivity leader’s position will be consolidated, moving toward a trillion-dollar market cap.
Its core competitiveness lies in the dual barriers of AI optical interconnect + custom chips, high profitability cash flow, and ecosystem integration with NVIDIA, which distinguishes it from second-tier AI chip stocks. After inclusion in the S&P 500, liquidity, institutional holdings, and valuation premiums will be comprehensively enhanced, further increasing long-term value certainty. $US500
Inclusion in the S&P 500 is not just a simple index adjustment, but a transformation of Marvell from a growth stock to a value-growth stock, bringing triple benefits of short-term capital support, medium to long-term liquidity, and valuation premiums, while also rationally viewing the short-term volatility expected to be realized.
(1) Short-term: Concentrated passive capital inflows, hedging sharp declines, supporting stock prices
Hundreds of billions of dollars in passive buying: After inclusion, index funds and ETFs tracking the S&P 500 are required to allocate according to weight, resulting in 10-20 billion USD in passive capital inflow, forming strong buying before June 22, short-term suppressing large declines.
Significant liquidity improvement: Post-inclusion, daily trading volume is expected to increase by 30%-50%, making institutional trading more convenient, reducing panic selling pressure, and lowering volatility.
Sentiment boost: Inclusion = official recognition of its AI leadership position by the S&P, combined with Jensen Huang’s endorsement, strengthening market confidence, and increasing short-term rebound potential.
(2) Medium to long-term: Upgrading institutional allocations, continuous valuation premium + capital dividends
Increased institutional shareholding: Transition from “small growth stocks” to “core large-cap tech stocks,” with pension funds, sovereign funds, and large public funds passively/actively increasing holdings, leading to a more stable shareholding structure and reduced valuation volatility.
Rising valuation premium: S&P 500 component stocks generally enjoy a 10%-20% liquidity premium, with Marvell’s high growth + low volatility attributes expected to push its P/E from the current 50+ toward a reasonable range of 60-70, aligning with AI leadership status.
Financing and M&A advantages: Post-inclusion, credit ratings improve, lowering financing costs and broadening financing channels, supporting ongoing acquisitions of cutting-edge AI technologies (such as photonic interconnects, advanced packaging), strengthening technological barriers, and forming a positive cycle of “M&A - Technology - Orders - Growth.”
(3) Rational outlook: Short-term benefits have been partly realized, caution against “buying the rumor and selling the fact”
Expectations overshot: Before the announcement, Jensen Huang’s “trillion” comments + inclusion expectations drove the stock price to surge by 50% in the short term, with some benefits already realized, and potential profit-taking after inclusion.
Systemic risks cannot be fully avoided: The current plunge in US stocks is due to rising interest rates, marginal concerns about AI demand, and chip stocks being overbought. Under systemic risk, Marvell cannot be immune, but its decline is likely smaller than the sector average.
Overall, Marvell’s inclusion in the S&P 500 is a perfect resonance of solid fundamentals, highly certain earnings growth, and index capital dividends. In the short term, passive capital supports hedging against declines, stabilizing after volatility, and outperforming the sector; in the medium term, driven by AI’s dual engines, over 40% high growth will be realized, and valuation will recover to new highs; in the long term, the AI interconnectivity leader’s position will be consolidated, moving toward a trillion-dollar market cap.
Its core competitiveness lies in the dual barriers of AI optical interconnect + custom chips, high profitability cash flow, and ecosystem integration with NVIDIA, which distinguishes it from second-tier AI chip stocks. After inclusion in the S&P 500, liquidity, institutional holdings, and valuation premiums will be comprehensively enhanced, further increasing long-term value certainty. $US500



























