You didn't buy a single share. But if you own a Nasdaq-100 or total-market fund, SpaceX landed in your retirement account automatically — and the stock is now below its IPO price.
SPCX debuts on Nasdaq at $135/share. $1.77T valuation — instantly 7th largest public company.
Nasdaq rule change: top-40 companies enter Nasdaq-100 after just 15 trading days, no float minimum.
QQQ, VTI, and Russell trackers forced to buy SPCX — no human decision required.
Your fund rebalances. SpaceX is now a holding — automatic, invisible, immediate.
Top-40 companies enter Nasdaq-100 after 15 days. Float minimum eliminated.
S&P Dow Jones declines to waive profitability rules. SpaceX excluded ≥12 months.
3.5× oversubscribed. $250B+ in orders. Nasdaq-100 clock starts.
SPCX peaks +67% in 4 days. Insiders and institutions begin distributing.
Closes at $148 in two-day slide as forced buying exhausts demand.
Sinks for second straight day. −40% from ATH.
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QQQ and Nasdaq-100 holders get SpaceX upside without day-one IPO risk or lockup exposure.
You never chose to hold a company with a $41B deficit and a $4.28B Q1 2026 loss. It's in your fund regardless.
At current price, SPCX is below its $135 IPO price. ATH buyers down 41%+. Insiders had penny-level cost basis.
SPY, VOO, IVV holders protected. S&P's 4-quarter profitability rule bars SpaceX until at least mid-2027.