The SPDR S&P 500 ETF, universally known by its ticker symbol SPY, is an Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) that tracks the performance of the S&P 500 index. Managed by State Street Global Advisors, SPY was the very first ETF listed in the United States (launched in 1993) and remains one of the largest and most popular in the world. Often nicknamed the “Spider,” it holds a basket of stocks of the 500 largest U.S. publicly traded companies, weighted by market capitalization. In essence, buying a single share of SPY gives an investor a small, diversified stake in the overall performance of America's big-business economy. Because it trades on a stock exchange just like an individual stock, it can be bought and sold throughout the trading day, offering investors both flexibility and immediate exposure to the broad market.
Think of SPY as the trailblazer that changed the investment landscape forever. Before its debut in 1993, if you wanted to invest in a broad basket of stocks, your main option was a traditional mutual fund, which was typically priced only once at the end of the trading day. SPY introduced a revolutionary concept: a fund that offered the diversification of an index fund but traded with the flexibility and liquidity of a stock. This innovation democratized investing, making it cheaper and easier for ordinary people to build a diversified portfolio with a single transaction. Its legacy is immense, having paved the way for the thousands of ETFs that exist today, covering nearly every imaginable market, sector, and strategy.
While value investing traditionally focuses on finding individual, undervalued companies through rigorous security analysis, a low-cost S&P 500 index fund has a firm place in the philosophy, most famously endorsed by Warren Buffett.
Warren Buffett has repeatedly advised that for most people who aren't professional investors, the best course of action is to simply own a low-cost S&P 500 index fund. The logic is simple: it's a bet on the long-term productive capacity of American business. By buying SPY, you avoid the often-fruitless (and expensive) game of trying to pick winning stocks or time the market, instead harnessing the power of the market itself over the long run.
For a value investor, SPY isn't a “value stock” in the classic sense. You aren't buying it because you believe the 500 companies within it are collectively trading below their intrinsic worth. Rather, it serves as an excellent, stable core for a portfolio. An investor might allocate a significant portion of their capital to SPY for broad market exposure and then use the remaining portion to hunt for specific, undervalued companies. This strategy provides a solid foundation of diversification while still allowing for the pursuit of outsized returns, or alpha.
SPY's enduring popularity stems from a powerful combination of benefits for the everyday investor.
Despite its many advantages, SPY is not without its own set of risks and considerations.