SpaceX enters the Nasdaq-100 on Tuesday with an index weight below 1%, forcing passive funds managing $800 billion to buy shares at Monday's close.
SpaceX enters the Nasdaq-100 on Tuesday with an index weight below 1%, forcing passive funds managing $800 billion to buy shares at Monday's close.

SpaceX enters the Nasdaq-100 on Tuesday with an index weight below 1%, forcing passive funds managing $800 billion to buy shares at Monday's close.
SpaceX joins the Nasdaq-100 on Tuesday after being fast-tracked under new rules for newly public megacaps, forcing exchange-traded and mutual funds with $800 billion in combined assets to buy shares at Monday's closing price.
"The free-float adjustment means SpaceX will initially be treated more like a $300 billion company than a $2 trillion one," said Priya Mehta, equity market structure analyst at Edgen. "Index funds will buy, but the weight is capped at less than 1%."
SpaceX sold less than 5% of its total shares in last month's public offering, and lockup rules prevent employees from selling for several months or more. That leaves a small fraction of shares publicly circulating. The Nasdaq adjusts index weights by free-float, capping SpaceX's initial representation at less than 1% of the cap-weighted index despite its roughly $2.1 trillion market capitalization. The Invesco QQQ ETF, with roughly half a trillion dollars in assets, is the largest fund adding SpaceX. State Street's newly launched SPDR Portfolio Nasdaq 100 fund charges a 0.1% annual fee, undercutting QQQ's 0.18% and Invesco's QQQM at 0.15%.
Index inclusion creates automatic demand from passive funds, a critical support for share prices in early trading. But the float adjustment limits how much Nasdaq-100 funds need to buy, and SpaceX won't join the more widely tracked S&P 500 for at least a year. As employee lockup periods expire over the next 12 months, index funds may help absorb selling from employees looking to cash out, a dynamic that weighed on shares of newly public companies like Facebook in the past.
SpaceX shares closed last week at $162, above their $150 IPO opening price but more than 20% below the highs reached in the first days of trading. Options pricing suggests traders anticipate a swing of as much as 8% in either direction by the end of this week, with a move that size potentially pushing the stock as high as $175 or as low as $148.
Wedbush analysts last week assigned an outperform rating with a $190 price target, saying SpaceX is "well-positioned to become a major hyperscaler" across AI, space launches, and Starlink internet connectivity. KeyBanc initiated with a sector weight rating, the equivalent of neutral, citing the limited public float as a constraint on near-term price discovery.
The fast-track inclusion sets a precedent for how Nasdaq handles newly public megacaps. SpaceX advisers reached out to index providers earlier this year seeking early inclusion, recognizing that the trillions of dollars parked in passive index-tracking funds create automatic demand for included stocks. QQQM alone has reported net inflows of $16 billion so far this year, meaning the fund has purchased billions of dollars in additional shares of the companies it tracks.
AI firms Anthropic and OpenAI could debut in the second half of 2026, though SpaceX's post-IPO volatility has reportedly given OpenAI pause about its own listing timeline. For now, the index inclusion provides a structural floor of buying demand — but analysts caution that financial performance and direct investor appetite remain the primary drivers of long-term returns.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.