Markets reshape rules to accommodate Musk's $2 trillion empire For decades, the guardians of the world's major indices maintained strict gatekeeping protocols to protect passive investors. Historically, the Nasdaq 100 required a seasoning period of up to a year before including new listings, allowing post-IPO volatility to settle. However, the anticipated public debut of SpaceX has triggered a fundamental shift in these mechanisms. The Nasdaq recently shortened its waiting period to just 15 trading days for massive companies, while S&P Dow Jones Indices proposed waiving profitability tests and free-float requirements to ensure the $1.75 trillion aerospace giant lands in the S&P 500 almost immediately. Starlink profits mask growing losses in rocket and AI divisions Investors buying into SpaceX via index funds are acquiring three distinct business units. Starlink, the satellite broadband service, is the sole engine of profitability, generating $4.5 billion in operating profit from 10 million subscribers. Conversely, the core rocket segment—housing Falcon 9 and Starship—lost $650 million last year as development costs surged. The third pillar, a combined AI and cloud segment including XAI and the X platform, remains a massive cash drain, losing $6.5 billion on just $3 billion in revenue. Altogether, the conglomerate lost $5 billion last year, yet seeks a valuation of 94 times revenue—dwarfing Nvidia's current multiple. Founder control and related-party deals challenge governance norms The SpaceX governance structure significantly favors Elon Musk. While retail investors receive Class A shares with one vote, Musk’s Class B shares carry ten votes each, granting him total control over board elections. Furthermore, the prospectus reveals $650 million in related-party transactions with Tesla, including the purchase of Cyber Trucks at full retail price. Passive investors cannot opt out of these arrangements; the index mandate requires funds to buy the entire package, governance flaws and all. Tracking the real impact on your personal portfolio Despite the staggering headline valuation, the immediate impact on individual portfolios is mitigated by the "free float" mechanism. SpaceX initially plans to float only 5% of its shares. Consequently, in a global tracker like VWRP, the stock would represent only 0.1% of the total—roughly 10p for every £100 invested. While this weight will rise as lock-ups expire over six months, the broader concern remains the increasing concentration of indices in volatile, founder-led mega-caps. Moving to a broad global tracker remains the most effective defense against this institutional shift toward top-heavy market structures.
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- Nov 20, 2024