SpaceX Joins Nasdaq 100 Index, Impacting Passive Fund Investments
SpaceX officially joins the Nasdaq 100 index on Tuesday, meaning investors in funds tracking the index will automatically gain exposure to the company’s stock. This inclusion follows new Nasdaq rules allowing recently public mega-cap companies to enter the index sooner. Despite SpaceX’s massive $2.1 trillion market valuation, it will initially represent less than 1% of the index due to limited publicly traded shares, as less than 5% of its stock was sold in its recent offering and lock-up periods restrict employee sales.
Funds managing about $800 billion in assets, including Invesco’s popular QQQ ETF, will purchase SpaceX shares at Monday’s closing price to mirror the index’s performance. Nasdaq weights stocks based on their free float, so SpaceX’s effective market cap for index purposes is roughly $300 billion. While QQQ is the largest fund adding SpaceX, it is not the cheapest; newer ETFs like State Street’s SPDR Portfolio Nasdaq 100 charge lower fees.
The index inclusion typically boosts a stock’s price due to automatic buying by passive funds, which have seen record inflows in recent years. However, analysts caution that SpaceX’s stock price could face downward pressure as employee lock-up periods expire and insiders sell shares, a pattern seen with other newly public companies like Facebook. SpaceX is not expected to join the broader S&P 500 index within the next year.
Long-term stock performance will depend more on SpaceX’s financial results and direct investor demand than on index inclusion. The article was translated exclusively from The Wall Street Journal by Globes.