Here's a fun Friday morning: SoFi Technologies Inc. (SOFI) just announced a $1.5 billion stock offering—roughly 4% dilution—and the market responded by dunking shares over 7% in pre-market trading. Not exactly what you want to see after closing at $29.60 the previous day.
Normally, dilution announcements trigger predictable selloffs. Shareholders grumble, traders shrug, life moves on. But this one's different. The timing has turned what should be a routine pullback into something much more interesting.
The S&P 500's quarterly rebalancing gets announced Friday afternoon. And SoFi just became a serious contender for inclusion.
Earlier this week, Barron's highlighted SoFi as a potential S&P addition, driven by changes in share count. Then Truist Securities analyst Matthew Coad added more fuel, pointing out that SoFi, Affirm Holdings Inc. (AFRM), and Toast Inc. (TOST) could all make the cut soon. According to the firm, "Affirm and SoFi meet all criteria, while Toast is marginally below the market-cap threshold."
Why S&P 500 Inclusion Actually Matters
This isn't about bragging rights. It's about forced buying. When a stock joins the S&P 500, every index fund and ETF tracking the benchmark has to purchase it. That creates real demand, often triggering what's called the "inclusion bounce"—a rapid price spike that has nothing to do with fundamentals and everything to do with mechanics.
The recent evidence is compelling. When Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR) joined the S&P 500 in September 2024, the stock jumped roughly 14% on its first day of inclusion, following a double-digit rally on the announcement itself. Year to date, Palantir is up over 136%.
When Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) earned its spot in September 2025, shares surged immediately as the inclusion effect kicked in. Robinhood is up about 90% over the past six months.
That's the playbook SoFi bulls are aggressively pointing to this morning.
The setup looks solid. SoFi is up roughly 109% year-to-date and about 89% over the past year. The stock was flirting with its $32.73 52-week high just days ago, a long way from its $8.62 low. The dilution has reset pricing, and speculators see this as a pre-inclusion discount, not fundamental damage.
The Next Few Hours Matter
Short term? This hurts. Medium term? It depends entirely on one decision this afternoon.
If SoFi gets the call, we could see Palantir-style fireworks. If the S&P committee passes, today's selloff becomes a cautionary tale about betting on speculation.
Either way, the clock is ticking. Friday's dip will either look brilliant or painful in hindsight, and someone's definitely going to say "told you so." Wall Street loves a good cliffhanger, and this one delivers.