SpaceX set terms for the largest IPO of all time — 555,555,555 shares at $135 apiece, raising close to $75 billion at a ~$1.77 trillion valuation, with trading expected on the Nasdaq June 12. Whether you ever buy a share, this one touches your retirement accounts through a quiet rule fight between the index funds — and most investors have no idea which side they're on.

SpaceX is going public in the most Elon way imaginable: a fixed price of $135 a share (555,555,555 of them — yes, really), raising close to $75 billion at a roughly $1.77 trillion valuation, skipping the usual price range entirely. It's expected to begin trading on the Nasdaq on June 12, and it would be the largest IPO in history. For perspective: it did about $18.7 billion of revenue in 2025 — so it's priced at roughly 94 times sales, versus about 3.4x for the average S&P 500 company — and it lost money last year. Morgan Stanley projects revenue could reach $3.4 trillion by 2040; the company itself claims a $28.5 trillion 'total addressable market,' most of which is tied to its unprofitable AI unit, xAI.
If you want to buy it, the brokerages expected to offer IPO shares to individuals include Fidelity, Schwab, Robinhood, SoFi and E*Trade — but with gates: Schwab is requiring an account balance of at least $100,000, while Fidelity lowered its threshold to $2,000 for this deal. Two fine-print items worth knowing before you fall in love: SpaceX's prospectus includes an unusual arbitration clause that bars shareholders from filing class-action fraud suits (they must arbitrate individually), and existing investors and employees are under a staggered lockup that lets them sell up to 20% of their stock relatively soon after the debut.
Here's the twist most people miss, and the single most useful thing in this whole story. The two big index families just split on whether to let giant new IPOs in early. The S&P 500 said it will not change its rules — new issuers like SpaceX must season for about 12 months before they're eligible. So an S&P 500 fund (think SPY or a typical 401(k) 'S&P 500 index' option) won't hold SpaceX for at least a year. The Nasdaq-100 took the opposite approach — it could add SpaceX as soon as July. So QQQ, which tracks the Nasdaq-100, may own SpaceX within weeks, while SPY won't. And it's not hypothetical — it's already moving markets. On Friday, as the Nasdaq fell 4.2% in its worst day in over a year, Jefferies analysts pinned part of the megacap-tech selling on managers raising cash to buy into this very IPO, calling the giants 'the most likely source of funds.' One WSJ live-coverage card put it bluntly: the SpaceX IPO 'could start a great divergence in index returns.' That divergence runs straight through the QQQ-vs-SPY split.
Translate that into household terms. If you want SpaceX exposure without buying the IPO, QQQ is the cleaner path of the two. If you don't want a money-losing, 94-times-sales rocket company in your retirement fund, you'll want to know that the Nasdaq-100 may add it automatically — that's a feature of QQQ, not a bug you opted into. Either way, this is a real, dateable decision hiding inside funds people think of as 'set and forget.' We'd rather you make it on purpose. (For the record, you may already have indirect exposure: Alphabet disclosed a 6.11% stake in SpaceX and is paying it nearly $1 billion a month in a cloud deal — so any S&P 500 fund already owns a sliver through Google.)
We don't chase IPO-day pops, and we won't be buying SpaceX at the open. Recent megacap debuts have been violently volatile — one AI chip name had to halt trading on its first day; a software IPO more than tripled on 'animal spirits.' The bear case is real and was argued sharply in the Journal's own comments: one reader pegged fair value near $500 billion — a third of the IPO price — and put better-than-even odds on the stock trading below $135 once insiders start selling. The valuation leans heavily on the unprofitable xAI unit and on Musk himself; the S-1 lists dependence on him as a risk factor.
None of that means SpaceX is a bad company — Starlink is a genuine cash engine. It means the price demands perfection, the structure (arbitration, staggered lockups, key-person risk) favors insiders, and the smart move for most households is to decide deliberately how much exposure they want and through which wrapper — not to let an index rule decide it for them.
No SpaceX at the IPO for our models — we don't pay 94x sales for a money-loser on day one, and we let the volatility settle before judging. But this is a genuine planning conversation: if you hold QQQ (or a Nasdaq-100 option in your 401(k)), you may own SpaceX by July; if you hold an S&P 500 fund, you won't for ~12 months. Bring your fund lineup to your next review and we'll map exactly where you stand — and whether the Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS) fee engine on this deal is the better way to own the IPO wave than the rocket itself.
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