SpaceX and OpenAI: The Mega IPO Grift
TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE
Some massive companies are set to go
public very soon. Private companies like
SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic would rank
among the largest companies if they went
public and index funds would be forced
to buy their stock. That means that if
you are an index fund investor, you may
soon be investing in these companies
whether you like it or not. The problem
is that most IPOs are terrible
investments and these ones in particular
raise some questions. I'm Ben Felix,
chief investment officer at PWL Capital,
and I'm going to tell you what the
upcoming mega IPOs mean for you and your
portfolio.
In this video, I'm going to take you
through how stock indices and the index
funds tracking them include IPOs, how
this might affect index fund returns,
and what you can do about it. I'll also
cover whether index fund investors are
missing out on private market returns,
which is a common perception based on
companies staying private longer. Index
funds are generally great investments
because they roughly deliver the returns
that the public stock market has to
offer. Since their primary role is
representing the stock market, some
stock indices aim to include new IPOs
soon after the company goes public. This
makes sense for the purpose of
representing the public stock market.
But the problem for index fund investors
is that IPOs have had historically
terrible returns. I'll come back to that
point later. Index funds today control
trillions of dollars. So, if you're a
new company listing on the stock market
or an investment bank facilitating an
IPO, getting the stock included in a
major index or multiple indices can mean
huge investment dollars flowing into its
shares on the public market as index
funds are forced to buy, giving sellers
liquidity and pushing up the share
price. This makes index inclusion very
desirable for shareholders of the newly
listed company, but probably not so much
for the index fund investors who are
left holding the bag. And it is often a
bag that they are left holding.
Companies tend to go public when they
think they can sell their stock at a
high price. Meaning, the moment you can
buy their stock on the secondary market
is precisely when the insiders believe
it's overvalued or at least nicely
valued. If you're an investor, you
probably don't want to buy an overpriced
stock, but index funds don't have that
kind of discretion. They're forced to
gobble up whatever is included in the
index, regardless of its price. The IPO
inclusion rules vary across indices. For
example, as of right now, the S&P 500
requires a stock to have been trading on
a public exchange for 12 months before
inclusion, while the S&P total market
index allows for inclusion within 5 days
for stocks that meet certain criteria.
This is called fasttrack entry which is
important to understand. Basically
stocks that meet certain criteria can be
eligible for near immediate inclusion in
some total market indices. As I
mentioned, the S&P 500 has historically
required shares to trade for a year
before inclusion. But as reported by
Bloomberg, S&P may be considering an S&P
500 rule change to accelerate the
inclusion of mega IPOs like SpaceX.
NASDAQ is considering similar changes
for the NASDAQ 100 to accelerate
inclusion. The implications here for
index fund investors are important. A
2025 paper looks at how fast track entry
into Crisp, that Center for Research and
Security Prices Indices affects stock
returns and IPO deal structure. VTI, for
example, a large ETF, tracks the CRISP
US total market index. Crisp adds
eligible securities to the index within
as few as 5 days for fasttrack entry.
The authors of this paper show that
expected index investor demand for IPO
shares causes FastTrack IPOs to
outperform their non-fastrack
counterparts by over 5 percentage points
following their listing. This
outperformance peaks at the index
inclusion date and reverts significantly
within two weeks thereafter. Basically,
index funds are being frontr run by
intermediaries like hedge funds who know
that index funds are going to be buying
the shares once they become eligible for
index inclusion and then the index funds
end up holding the shares as they revert
back down closer to their IPO price. The
authors call this a shadow tax largely
paid by index fund investors. It's like
ticket scalpers for concerts and sports
events. Another important index
definition that's proving to be relevant
to mega IPOs is the concept of free
float. Free float is the proportion of a
company's shares that are available for
purchase in the public equity market.
Most major indices have a minimum float
requirement and weight stocks by their
public float. A company could go public
while only making a small portion of
their overall market capitalization
freely available on the public exchange.
This would be referred to as a lowflat
IPO. As reported by the Financial Times,
SpaceX plans to float less than 5% of
its equity, much lower than the average
IPO. With a $ 1.75 trillion valuation,
but only a 5% public float, most indices
would weight it at its float of 88
billion, and many would actually exclude
it altogether. NASDAQ currently has a
10% minimum float and weight stocks
based on the value of all listed shares
of the company with no regard for free
free float, which is unique. But they
recently approved rule changes following
a public consultation to speed up IPO
inclusion, eliminate the lowflat cutoff,
and introduce a float factor in their
waiting of lowflat stocks. The cynical
view on this is that NASDAQ is changing
the NASDAQ 100 index rules to win SpaceX
over in an effort to get their listing
on the NASDAQ exchange. including in the
index would force significant index fund
buying, which likely ends up being good
for SpaceX, its early investors, and
NASDAQ, but potentially comes at the
expense of NASDAQ 100 index fund
investors. Some indices like the crisp
US total market index tracked by VTI
continue to have a low float cutoff of
10% for fasttrack entry into the index.
Between inclusion criteria and index
waiting methodologies, there's some
uncertainty about how these mega IPOs
will initially show up in indices. But
there's no question that their listings
will change the public market over time.
That's likely why index providers are
considering making changes to get these
companies represented in their indices.
To reiterate a point from earlier,
indices are meant to represent the stock
market. A blog post from index provider
S&P Global shows that just SpaceX,
OpenAI, and Anthropic would make up 2.9%
of the S&P World Index at their full
market caps. That's almost as much as
Canada. But these numbers assume that
the total market cap of the companies is
included in the index. Since many of
these IPOs are expected to have low
public floats, that should be accounted
for in estimating their market impact.
In another blog post, index provider
MSCI calculated the potential changes to
the MSCI allcountry world investable
market index in the event of some of the
largest private companies going public
in 2026. This was written back in
February 2026 when SpaceX had a quaint
valuation of only 800 billion, but the
general points are still relevant. They
ask in the blog post what would happen
to the index to this world index if the
10 largest companies from the Msei all
country venturebacked private company
index went public. Since the free float
at the time of listing is unknown, they
go through a few scenarios. At a 5%
float, only four of the 10 large private
companies would achieve index inclusion
based on MSCI's inclusion rules. At a
10% float, seven of the 10 companies
would achieve index inclusion, but not
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