Quick Read – NASDAQ fast-tracks SpaceX into the NASDAQ 100, creating forced buying through QQQ while the S&P 500 with 20x more tracked assets holds its standards. – QQQ already runs concentrated, with NVDA at 10% and MSFT at 9% of a fund up 41% over the past year before SpaceX…
ins. – SpaceX launches with a 4% float and a 366-day founder lock-up, engineering a forced-buying wave while concentrating both upside and downside risk at listing. – Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Invesco QQQ Trust didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today
Elon Musk used a JPMorgan-hosted investor event this week to pitch SpaceX as entering a new chapter, telling Jamie Dimon that the company is “embarking on a massive new growth phase, and we need capital for that.” The IPO is scheduled to price on NASDAQ on June 12, 2026. S&P Global declined to change its rules to fast-track SpaceX into the S&P 500, while NASDAQ agreed to do exactly that for its own benchmark. Musk’s Pitch: Scale and Predictability Musk framed the raise around two questions investors keep asking.
Why now, and how stable is the revenue base? On the growth side, he cited plans for 100,000 satellites and space-based energy generation. On the durability question, he said, “Before, revenue was a little unstable.