

SpaceX is listing 3.3% of its shares at a $1.75 trillion valuation. Nasdaq and S&P are rewriting their rules so your pension fund has no choice but to buy the rest at that price.
Price-to-sales ratio: SpaceX vs mature tech
SpaceX would list at roughly 9x the sales multiple of the most expensive mature tech giant. Source: SpaceX S-1 filing, 20 May 2026.
The forced-buying cascade in five steps
| Step | What happens |
|---|---|
| 1. IPO | 3.3% float at $1.5T+ valuation |
| 2. Day 15 | Enters Nasdaq 100 under fast-entry rule |
| 3. Index funds buy | 5x float multiplier amplifies demand |
| 4. Price rises | Market cap qualifies for S&P 500 |
| 5. S&P trackers buy | Largest passive pool forced in |
Source: SpaceX S-1, SEC Rule SR-NASDAQ-2026-004. Your pension fund has no opt-out.
Key takeaways
SpaceX's May 2026 S-1 filing reveals the company lost $4.9 billion last year on $18.7 billion of revenue, with losses widening to $4.3 billion in Q1 2026 alone.
The IPO is structured as a low-float listing at a $1.5 trillion or higher valuation, with Nasdaq and S&P rewriting their index inclusion rules to fast-track entry.
Musk controls 85% of voting power through 10:1 supervoting Class B shares; the public buys Class A only, with no governance influence.
Index funds (Nasdaq 100, S&P 500, MSCI World) will be forced to buy SpaceX shares at whatever price this engineered scarcity produces.