The Biggest IPO In History Isn't What You Think It Is
SpaceX is preparing to go public at a staggering $2 trillion valuation, which would make it the largest IPO in history — bigger even than Saudi Aramco. But as the company races toward a public listing, serious questions are emerging about what investors are actually buying. Is this a space company, a satellite internet provider, or an AI bet wrapped in a rocket? And why is NASDAQ rewriting its own rulebook to fast-track SpaceX into the NASDAQ 100 index just 15 days after listing — a move that would force trillions of dollars in passive index funds to buy the stock, regardless of price?
Key Takeaways
NASDAQ is rewriting index inclusion rules to fast-track SpaceX into the NASDAQ 100 just 15 days post-IPO with a 4–5% weighting, forcing passive fund managers to buy the stock regardless of valuation.
At 125 times sales and 25% projected revenue growth, SpaceX's valuation is unprecedented — by comparison, Google went public at 10 times sales while growing 240% annually.
Two-thirds of SpaceX profits come from Starlink, which already serves 10 million customers but faces questionable assumptions that it will reach 1.2 billion users despite income constraints in target markets.
SpaceX's plan to build data centers in space faces severe engineering challenges: cooling a single Nvidia chip in orbit requires the second-largest cooling array in space after the ISS.
Microsoft and OpenAI have renegotiated their exclusive relationship into an open arrangement that benefits both: OpenAI can now sell through AWS, while Microsoft no longer pays revenue share and retains 27% ownership through 2032.
In a Nutshell
SpaceX's $2 trillion IPO is engineered for maximum demand and minimum scrutiny: NASDAQ is changing longstanding rules to rush the company into indexes at 125 times sales, forcing passive investors to buy while insiders cash out at a valuation that defies historical comparcomp and relies on speculative bets like data centers in space.
The Index Inclusion Scandal
NASDAQ is rewriting rules to fast-track SpaceX into indexes, forcing passive investors to buy.
NASDAQ has changed longstanding index inclusion rules to accommodate SpaceX's IPO in ways that have never been done before. Normally, a company must be publicly traded for about a year to be «seasoned in the market» and find a natural valuation with real buyers and sellers. SpaceX will be added to the NASDAQ 100 after just 15 days. NASDAQ has also waived its float caps, allowing SpaceX to receive a 4–5% weighting despite having very few shares available for public trading.
Reuters reported that Elon Musk negotiated directly with NASDAQ, effectively threatening to list on the NYSE unless the exchange agreed to fast-tracked index insertion. This arrangement is brilliant for existing SpaceX shareholders but problematic for passive investors. Trillions of dollars in index funds will be forced to buy the stock at whatever price prevails 15 days post-IPO, regardless of valuation. Even active fund managers who track the NASDAQ will feel compelled to own a stock representing nearly 5% of the index, creating artificial demand that has little to do with fundamentals.
Patrick Boyle on Valuation Insanity
The company is priced at 125 times sales with zero earnings transparency.
“The valuation they're talking about — to be clear, they're talking about 125 times sales. So that's not earnings, that's sales. And we don't even really know what the earnings are of SpaceX. There was, you know, Reuters published that they had EBITDA of $8 billion. But EBITDA is not earnings. It's earnings before essentially the cost of building satellites and building rockets, you know, which for SpaceX you have to imagine is a significant cost.”
The Valuation in Historical Context
SpaceX's price-to-sales multiple dwarfs every major tech IPO in history.
What You're Actually Buying
The Space Data Center Problem
Cooling AI chips in orbit may require cooling arrays larger than the ISS.
The Space Data Center Problem
One company launched a single Nvidia chip into space to run an AI program and had to constantly shut it down due to overheating. Space is cold, but it's also a vacuum — convection cooling requires air or liquid. The next iteration of this tiny satellite will feature the second-largest cooling array in space, behind only the International Space Station. To cool an actual data center in orbit would require cooling fins «miles and miles square,» making it the largest man-made object in space by far.
Emerging Markets Surge on AI Capex
MSCI Emerging Markets hit all-time highs, driven by Taiwan and South Korea chip stocks.
The MSCI Emerging Markets index hit a new all-time high, up 16% year-to-date — roughly three times the S&P 500's gains. But this isn't a broad-based rally reflecting economic improvement across developing nations. It's a concentrated bet on AI infrastructure. Three semiconductor companies — TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix — are driving almost 70% of the entire index's earnings growth.
TSMC alone has a higher weighting in the benchmark than the entire country of India. South Korea and Taiwan are leading the move, fueled by insatiable demand for AI chips. Deputy portfolio manager Sid Jane notes that the index has essentially become a proxy for the global AI capex buildout, not a reflection of underlying emerging market fundamentals.
Microsoft and OpenAI: The Open Relationship
Microsoft renegotiates exclusivity but retains ownership and a revenue share through 2032.
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