SpaceX Joins Nasdaq-100: Passive Funds Start Paying Attention
SpaceX joining the Nasdaq-100 marks a shift from IPO hype to index-driven ownership.
For investors, the key point is not that index inclusion guarantees upside. It does not.
The real mechanism is fund flow. ETFs and index funds tracking the Nasdaq-100 may need to hold SpaceX according to index rules. That can create passive buying demand, higher trading volume and broader institutional visibility.
But SpaceX is also unusual: large market value, potentially limited public float, and uncertain initial index weight.
The next things to watch are SpaceX’s actual index weight, ETF rebalancing volume, and whether Starlink, launch services and AI satellite infrastructure can continue to support its valuation.
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