- SpaceX joins the Nasdaq-100 on Tuesday after being fast-tracked under new index rules designed to include newly public megacap companies sooner; mutual and ETFs collectively managing $800 billion tied to the Nasdaq-100 — including the $500 billion Invesco QQQ — are required to buy SpaceX shares at Monday’s closing price, creating automatic, price-insensitive demand regardless of individual fund managers’ views on the company.
- Despite SpaceX’s $2.1 trillion market cap making it one of the most-valuable US companies, it will enter the index at less than 1% weight — because it sold less than 5% of total shares in its June IPO, meaning the index’s float-adjusted weighting methodology, which caps weight at three times float-adjusted market cap, treats SpaceX more like a $300 billion company than a $2 trillion one until lockup periods expire and more shares enter circulation.
- As employee lockup periods end over the coming year, index funds will need to continuously buy more SpaceX shares to match the rising float-adjusted weight — creating a sustained, structural bid that analysts say has historically supported newly public large companies during the lockup expiration period, even as insiders sell; SpaceX won’t be eligible for S&P 500 inclusion for at least another year under that index’s separate rules.
- The QQQ fee war has intensified around SpaceX’s inclusion: State Street’s new SPDR Portfolio Nasdaq 100 fund charges 0.10% annually, undercutting QQQ’s 0.18%; Invesco also offers QQQM at 0.15%; BlackRock is set to launch its own Nasdaq-100 fund shortly — meaning the $800 billion passive ecosystem tracking this index is now a genuine multi-product competitive market, and SpaceX’s entry is a catalyst for investors to compare their options.
What Happened?
SpaceX officially enters the Nasdaq-100 index on Tuesday after Nasdaq fast-tracked its inclusion under new rules that allow newly public megacap companies to join its flagship tech index sooner than the standard waiting period. SpaceX proactively reached out to index providers earlier this year seeking early inclusion, correctly anticipating that passive fund buying would provide meaningful price support for its shares. The $800 billion in mutual and ETF assets tracking the Nasdaq-100 — including the $500 billion QQQ — must buy SpaceX at Monday’s close to mirror the index. The float-adjusted weighting methodology keeps SpaceX’s initial index weight below 1%, since only a small fraction of total shares are publicly available following the June IPO in which less than 5% of total shares were sold.
Why It Matters?
Index inclusion is one of the most reliable engineered sources of demand in modern markets: the $800 billion in Nasdaq-100-tracking funds will buy SpaceX shares not because of fundamental analysis but because the index requires it. For SpaceX, this creates a structural bid during one of the most vulnerable periods for any newly public company — the months before lockup expiration when insider selling pressure is highest. As Nasdaq adjusts SpaceX’s float weighting upward over time (as more shares become publicly tradeable), passive funds will need to buy more SpaceX proportionally, creating a sustained demand tailwind. The float-cap mechanism also means SpaceX’s effective market impact on the index will grow gradually rather than immediately, giving existing QQQ holders a soft landing on the exposure increase.
What’s Next?
The first major inflection point is the expiration of employee lockup periods, which will trigger both increased selling pressure from insiders and proportionally higher buying requirements from index funds — a dynamic that has historically provided a partial offset. S&P 500 inclusion is the larger prize: the S&P tracks roughly $7 trillion in passive assets, but SpaceX won’t be eligible for at least a year under standard rules. Whether SpaceX seeks accelerated S&P 500 inclusion — as it did with Nasdaq — will be one of the more closely watched corporate index-strategy decisions of 2027. For individual investors currently holding QQQ, State Street’s 0.10% SPDR fund and Invesco’s QQQM at 0.15% offer the same SpaceX exposure at lower cost, making the fee comparison more consequential now that the index’s composition is settled.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













