SpaceX in Nasdaq 100: The Risk Repricing Case
SpaceX’s entry into the Nasdaq 100 is framed as a catalyst for “forced flows” and risk repricing across markets, ETFs, and potentially crypto-linked positioning. Nasdaq specifies that SpaceX will enter the index before the open on July 7, 2026, setting the timing for related index-tracking demand. The article cites ETF.com estimates of about $4.3 billion of demand from QQQ alone, with total mechanical buying across Nasdaq 100 and Russell trackers in a $22–$27 billion range. It also notes the scale of initial supply from IPO terms: 555.6 million shares priced at $135 per share, with free-float restrictions and lockups driving uncertainty in flow projections. It references possible upside or volatility around the release of locked shares, pointing to Axios reporting that the first meaningful unlock could follow the June 30, 2026 quarter-end, potentially making up to 912 million shares eligible to trade. Market makers are described as likely managing inventory and hedging through options to smooth impact.






