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  1. Masters in Business
  2. At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?
At The Money:  Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?

At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?

Masters in Business · May 13, 2026

The SpaceX IPO reveals a broken system where Nasdaq rule changes favor insiders, distort passive index funds, and distort market mechanics.

Modern IPOs Prioritize Insider Liquidity Over Raising Growth Capital

The traditional purpose of an IPO—raising capital for company growth—is obsolete. Today, companies scale using private equity and only go public to allow early investors and insiders to cash out. This means the public market captures significantly less of a company's early, high-growth phase.

At The Money:  Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism? thumbnail

At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?

Masters in Business·a day ago

Passive Investing Is No Longer Passive as Index Providers Make Active Bets

Index providers are no longer neutral. By changing inclusion rules to quickly add "hot" IPOs like SpaceX, they are making active bets on specific companies. This blurs the line between active and passive investing, requiring investors to have an opinion on the index's strategy itself rather than just blindly buying.

At The Money:  Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism? thumbnail

At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?

Masters in Business·a day ago

Nasdaq's New Rules Create Forced, Artificial Demand for Mega-IPOs

For companies like SpaceX, Nasdaq now allows index inclusion in just 15 days (down from six months) and artificially inflates weight by treating a 5% float as 15%. This creates a massive, predictable, and forced buying event from index funds, which must sell other holdings to accommodate the new stock, distorting the market.

At The Money:  Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism? thumbnail

At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?

Masters in Business·a day ago

Recurring Post-IPO Unlocks Will Trigger New Waves of Forced Index Buying

The market distortion from an IPO's index inclusion isn't a one-time event. As insiders' shares unlock months later, the public float increases. Nasdaq's rules will then force index funds to buy even more shares to match the new, higher float (multiplied by 3x), creating a recurring cycle of predictable, forced buying and price distortion.

At The Money:  Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism? thumbnail

At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?

Masters in Business·a day ago