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SpaceX Joins the Nasdaq-100 on July 7. What It Means for Index Fund Investors

On July 7, millions of index-fund investors will start owning a rocket company they never chose.

SpaceX Joins the Nasdaq-100 on July 7. What It Means for Index Fund Investors

Published July 1, 2026 · Category: Finance

Overview

On June 12, SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) completed the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history, raising about $85.7 billion after underwriters exercised their overallotment option. Less than a month later, the company is about to become something more than just a hot new stock, but also one that millions of people will own indirectly without ever choosing to buy it.

Before the market opens on July 7, the company will join the Nasdaq-100, the index that sits behind the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ: QQQ) and a long list of 401(k) and retirement-plan funds. More than $800 billion is benchmarked to that index, and all of it now has to make room for Elon Musk's rocket company.

Details

Here's what that actually means if you hold a Nasdaq-100 fund.

Continue reading

Source

Originally published at www.fool.com.

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