SpaceX’s record IPO has left SPCX trading as a new off-benchmark gauge for mega-cap risk while S&P 500 inclusion remains delayed.
S&P Dow Jones Indices reaffirmed on Jun. 4 that new IPOs must complete a 12-month seasoning period before they can enter the S&P 500, keeping SpaceX outside the benchmark despite its size.
SpaceX priced its IPO at $135 on Jun. 11, selling 555.6 million shares and raising about $75 billion, according to the company.
SPCX opened near $150 the next day and closed around $161, up roughly 19%, lifting the company’s market capitalization above $2.0 trillion, according to Reuters coverage republished by Investing.com.
That matters because the S&P 500 guides more than $20 trillion in assets, while analysts cited by Reuters estimated that an immediate inclusion at a $2 trillion valuation and about 5% float could have drawn roughly $10 billion in passive demand.
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Without automatic index buying, SPCX now gives investors a clearer look at discretionary demand for long-duration growth, frontier technology and crowded mega-cap trades.
A strong SPCX tape can suggest that investors are still willing to chase growth, while weakness during macro stress may show that risk appetite is thinning before it appears in broader benchmarks.
The signal could also matter for Bitcoin (BTC), since crypto often moves with liquidity conditions and speculative equity sentiment during volatile weeks.
Traders can compare SPCX with the cap-weighted S&P 500, the equal-weight S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 to see whether leadership is broadening or becoming concentrated in a small group of large names. The retrospective point is simple: mega-cap IPOs can reshape market behavior before they enter indexes, and SpaceX’s first days show how a stock outside the benchmark can still influence risk positioning across equities and crypto.
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