A stock index is meant to track a basket of stocks. The S&P 500 is a famous one. It tracks a group of 500 of the largest and most influential U.S. stocks, making it the benchmark indicator for equity performance. Ask someone "how did Wall Street do today?" and they'll likely tell you how much the S&P 500 moved.
While it represents a high-profile case study, the S&P 500 is just one example. There are hundreds of stock indexes, each targeting different baskets of stocks. Some follow general market performance (the S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrial Average). Others target specific industries or particular market cap sizes (small cap, mid cap, etc.).
These indexes are fundamentally mathematical constructions. We say they track "baskets of stocks," but it's not like there's an actual basket somewhere. As such, there can be some space between the theoretical performance of stocks in an index and the performance of the actual stocks that underlie that index.
Index arbitrage looks to profit from these potential gaps in performance. An investor would buy (or short) a futures contract based on a particular index, and then take the opposite position in the actual stocks that make up that index. The theory is that, over time, the little mispricings that happen in the index system will work themselves out. The gap will close. When it does, the arbitrage position will squeeze out some profit.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is a Country Basket (Index...30 Views
Finance, a la shmoop. What is a country basket index fund?
All right we're picking daisies, marigolds, lilies so uh how do we [Pictures of flowers]
rephrase in Italian? Like, we want to fill a portfolio basket with just stocks [Pouring a glass of red wine]
representing the overall financial health of Italy. Is Italy healthy? While
they smoke a lot they drink a lot of wine they eat a bunch of pasta but there
always seems to be a woman from some small village who's celebrating her [Old woman at a birthday party]
117th birthday over there. Well a country basket is just an index fund of
stocks representing a country. Like we're doing Korea... South we're gonna have
in that basket dunno some Samsung, a load of Daewoo, a hunk of Hyundai and some [Company stocks being added to the basket]
nice barbecue on the side. That'd be our Korean country basket and it's a good
basket to fill if you're just bullish on a country but not really sure which
flower on which to place your bets. It's like instead of trying to decide between [The stocks in the basket turn into flowers]
roulette or poker or slots... Well you just buy stock in Las Vegas
Sands you know you bet on the entire casino, and bueno Fortuna you know good [Someone checking their cards in a casino]
luck there pal, doesn't the house always win? Yeah so why do people keep going there?...
Up Next
What is Arbitrage? Arbitrage is a trading strategy used to make risk-free money. The investor buys a security in one market and sells it in another...
What is the difference between mutual funds and index funds? Mutual funds are professionally managed. Those investors trade shares and realize taxa...