S&p 500 Moves Spur Passive Buying in SiTime and Solstice Midcap Entries

Tonight at 11: 59 p. m. ET passive index funds will be forced to buy shares of Solstice Advanced Materials and SiTime, creating immediate structural demand for those midcap stocks; the moves follow the March 2026 quarterly rebalancing that left vacancies after upgrades tied to the s&p 500 and S&P 100.
Immediate buying pressure for Solstice Advanced Materials and SiTime
The S&P MidCap 400, which has more than $100 billion of assets following it, added SiTime (SITM) and Solstice Advanced Materials (SOLS) tonight, prompting automatic purchases by funds that track the index. Solstice sits on a market cap of $11. 4 billion after gaining 49% across the past year, but shares fell 5. 93% today and were little changed after-hours following a tough week for AI supply-chain names.
S&p 500 upgrades by Lumentum and Coherent opened the MidCap vacancies
Lumentum (LITE) and Coherent (COHR) graduated to the S&P 500, creating the two openings in the S&P MidCap 400 that Solstice and SiTime filled. That chain — upgrades to the S&p 500 and S&P 100 leading to MidCap replacements — is the mechanical reason passive funds will rebalance without deliberation, buying new inclusions proportional to market cap.
March 2026 quarterly rebalancing and company-level details that matter to investors
The additions were announced as part of the March 2026 quarterly rebalancing in the official S&P Global announcement. SiTime was trading at $327. 35 as of today’s close and has a one-year return of +83. 82%; the stock dropped 8% today and 15. 4% over the past week. SiTime reported Q4 revenue of $113. 28 million and non-GAAP EPS of $1. 53, and CEO Rajesh Vashist highlighted broad-based growth driven by AI for the Communications, Enterprise and Datacenter business.
Still, those company facts sit beside a structural market fact: passive funds that track the S&P MidCap 400, including funds that collectively manage more than $100 billion tied to the index, buy inclusions automatically. For a company already under short-term selling pressure, that forced buying can materially affect near-term share movement.
That mechanical buying also connects to major passive vehicles that track the MidCap benchmark; the index is the reference for large ETFs that manage substantial assets and will execute purchases in line with the new index weights.
More details are in the official S&P Global announcement. If passive fund inflows materialize as a result of the rebalancing, forced buying should lift demand for Solstice and SiTime by next week.




