Elon Musk’s SpaceX is eligible for rapid inclusion in major U.S. and global stock indexes after newly announced fast-entry rules from FTSE Russell, a development that could amplify investor demand around what may become the largest initial public offering in history.
FTSE Rules Open Door For SpaceX
According to a Reuters report on Tuesday, FTSE Russell, a London Stock Exchange Group business, said SpaceX appears eligible for both the Russell U.S. Equity Indexes and the FTSE Global Equity Index Series. FTSE Russell had proposed a fast-entry mechanism for IPOs in February while revising eligibility rules for its Russell U.S. indexes.
The index provider estimated SpaceX’s investable market capitalization at about $70 billion. That clears the $17.5 billion market-adjusted breakpoint for Russell Top 500 inclusion and the $13.5 billion FTSE GEIS fast-entry threshold.
Major Indexes Could Add SpaceX Quickly
SpaceX’s IPO is expected to headline a busy year for listings, with venture-backed companies including OpenAI and Anthropic also preparing for public debuts. Musk’s space venture is seeking a public listing that could value it at $1.75 trillion, targeting a $75 billion raise at that valuation.
FTSE Russell said it expects to add SpaceX to the Russell Top 50, Russell Top 200 and Russell 1000 indexes. It could also qualify for the FTSE GEIS Global All Series, FTSE All-World, FTSE World Index and FTSE Global Total Cap.
The provider cautioned that its assessment is based on SpaceX’s current S-1 filing and limited public information, and that later filings could change the outcome.
Reuters has separately reported that SpaceX aims to list as early as June 12, with a roadshow planned for June 4 and a share sale possible June 11.
Nasdaq Rule Shift Draws Investor Concern
Nasdaq also changed its rules to court SpaceX, allowing qualifying mega-cap IPOs to enter the Nasdaq-100 after 15 trading days rather than 3 to 12 months. However, critics warn the shift could create forced buying, as passive funds rush into a volatile, newly public and still unprofitable company before normal price discovery.
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