Global·NewlyNews

The SpaceX IPO is already upending the stock market

· Axios

Elon Musk's trillion-dollar-plus SpaceX isn't a public company yet, but its size and ambitions are already upending the stock market and sparking questions over the power and influence wielded by such behemoths. Why it matters: The IPO, expected next month, would signal the start of a new AI era for the public markets, potentially valuing SpaceX as much as $2 trillion. The big picture: OpenAI and Anthropic are also expected to IPO this year — possibly translating into $5 trillion in value in the markets, estimates venture capitalist and MIT research fellow Paul Kedrosky. The new stocks will hit the markets like a tsunami, he says. The IPOs will trigger an enormous wave of demand from investors who will pull money out of other assets to buy — sort of like how the ocean pulls back before it crashes over the beach and into the surrounding area upending everything. The "scale and consequences" will be massive, he says. The latest: The S&P 500 is considering changing its rules to fast-track SpaceX's inclusion into the benchmark index. If that happened, it would guarantee lots of buyers for the stock — index funds, which make up an increasingly large share of the market, would effectively be forced to invest. Friction point: Critics say the changes are unfair and distort the stock market . "The rules are being rewritten to benefit IPO issuers and early-stage insiders, and your capital is the tool being USED to enrich them," writes long-time investor George Noble on Substack . The proposal is "egregious," argues WSJ columnist James Mackintosh, saying that it is an acknowledgement that there are different rules for the big companies. Yes, but: The market is changing to accommodate these mega IPOs, not because of some conspiracy, but because the indexes want to reflect reality. "Investors want indexes to be representative of the market," says Jay Ritter, the director of the IPO initiative at Warrington College of Business at the Uni...