- SpaceX’s $75 billion raise at a $1.8 trillion valuation would be more than twice the largest IPO in history — Nasdaq rewrote rules so it can enter the Nasdaq 100 in just 15 trading days, FTSE Russell in 5, and S&P is consulting on instant mega-cap inclusion
- Passive index-tracking funds could be forced to buy nearly $20 billion in SpaceX shares on index inclusion — roughly a quarter of the entire offering, per Bloomberg Intelligence estimates
- Musk is reserving up to 30% of the deal (~$22.5 billion) for retail investors — an unprecedented allocation that upends the traditional IPO playbook and could dampen post-listing aftermarket performance
- At $1.8 trillion, SpaceX trades at 93x trailing 12-month sales — 15x the Nasdaq 100’s multiple — with a Danish pension fund blacklisting the stock over governance and Yale’s Roger Ibbotson warning of a “superstar premium” that narratives historically fail to deliver on
What Happened?
SpaceX’s listing has triggered a cascade of institutional and regulatory adaptation unlike anything Wall Street has seen before. Nasdaq rewrote eligibility rules to allow index entry in just 15 trading days — down from a three-month minimum — specifically to accommodate low-float mega-caps. FTSE Russell followed with a five-day fast-track. S&P Dow Jones is consulting on similar changes that could generate nearly $20 billion in automatic passive demand upon inclusion. Meanwhile, SpaceX is reserving up to 30% of its deal — potentially $22.5 billion — for retail investors, inverting the traditional IPO model where institutions get allocations and retail provides the aftermarket bid. Musk is betting his devoted fan base will be the stickiest ownership base, giving institutional investors confidence they won’t be left holding the bag.
Why It Matters?
This IPO is a stress test of the entire architecture of public markets. Index integrity is at stake: NYSE President Lynn Martin publicly accused Nasdaq of tailoring rule changes to land the listing, calling provisions that triple market-value calculations for low-float stocks “questionable.” Passive funds — which exist to track indexes, not pick stocks — will be forced to buy tens of billions of SpaceX shares automatically at whatever price the market sets. SpaceX is framing itself as an AI infrastructure company (Anthropic cloud deal worth up to $45B, data centers in space) more than a rocket business, but Starlink generates over half its revenue — suggesting it might end up in communications alongside Alphabet and Meta. At 93x trailing sales versus the Nasdaq 100’s 6x, the valuation prices in perfection. A $25 billion Danish pension fund has already blacklisted the stock over governance: Musk retains tight voting control, which its CIO called “catastrophic.” Yale’s Roger Ibbotson warns the narrative premium “is hard to deliver on.”
What’s Next?
Investor marketing begins June 4; pricing expected as early as June 11. S&P’s fast-track decision — expected imminently — determines whether $20 billion in passive buying is locked in from day one. The MSCI and S&P industry classification call will determine which sector ETFs become forced buyers. Watch Tesla and Bitcoin — Interactive Brokers’ Steve Sosnick sees them as the most likely assets retail liquidates to fund SpaceX purchases, given brokerage cash levels are running low. Longer term, the stakes are binary: as Acadian’s Owen Lamont put it, “If it goes well, it could usher in a wave of issuance and unfettered market euphoria. If it goes poorly, it could shut the door for OpenAI and Anthropic.”
Source: Bloomberg












