KEY POINTS
  • "The action today ... had nothing to do with Covid and everything to do with Tesla's admission to the S&P 500," CNBC's Jim Cramer said.
  • "Usually, new entrants to the S&P are much smaller than this. Tesla's one of the 10 largest companies in America by market cap, so the impact reverberated through the whole market," the "Mad Money" host said.
  • "I bet Tesla has more upside as [CEO Elon] Musk keeps meeting and beating his targets," he said.

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The pandemic took a backseat to Tesla on the stock market Friday as traders exchanged shares ahead of its upcoming debut on the market benchmark index, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Friday.

Trade in Tesla, the poster child of high-flying tech stocks in 2020, put pressure on the rest of the market in anticipation of the electric-vehicle maker's inclusion on the S&P 500 before Monday's open, he said.

In this article