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S&P 500 sees declining company stability with average tenure under 20 years

On January 11, 2026 by voice

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The S&P 500 does not stay the same. It never has. Companies enter, companies leave. Some grow fast and earn a spot, while others shrink, merge, go private, or collapse.

Stability is not how this index works.

So perhaps this churn helps explain how the market behaves over time. Prices can rise while the lineup behind them shifts quietly. The S&P 500 today is not the same index from ten years ago. It is not even close. The market keeps replacing its own parts.

Turnover changes leadership and investor outcomes

Goldman Sachs analyst Ben Snider put numbers to this change. “On average, 20% of S&P 500 constituents turn over every five years,” Ben wrote in a January 6 research note. He shared a chart tracking this pattern back to 1985. The data shows steady turnover across decades, not a one‑off event.

This matters because the market is never pushed by all stocks at once. At any moment, a small group drives gains. Those leaders usually look unstoppable. Then many of them slow down and fall behind. New stocks take their place and carry the market forward. That handoff keeps happening.

Recent history shows it clearly. Six of the Magnificent 7 joined the S&P 500 only within the past 25 years. They were not permanent fixtures. They earned entry over time. Their rise shows how quickly leadership can change inside the index.

Turnover also explains why beating the market is so hard. Long‑term returns come from a minority of names. Most stocks do not outperform. Picking a winner is worse than a coin flip. The odds lean toward underperforming the S&P 500, not beating it.

Timing makes it tougher. Buying a strong stock is only half the job. Selling before it drags returns is just as critical. As companies spend less time in the index, that timing window keeps shrinking. Mistakes happen faster.

Many investors avoid those choices by buying index funds. Holding an S&P 500 fund is called passive investing because it limits trading. But the holdings inside that fund still change. Investors own a rotating mix of companies as names enter and exit.

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