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You Might Own SpaceX Within A Week Without Buying A Single Share

Published Jun 13, 2026
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Summary:
  • Major index funds can add SpaceX after just five trading days, so many investors will own a slice automatically.
  • The S&P 500 is different, since SpaceX likely won't qualify for years until it turns a profit.
  • Sen. Elizabeth Warren sent index providers a letter questioning the faster rules.

You don't have to buy SpaceX to own SpaceX. If you hold a broad index fund, a slice may land in your account within a week.

For most people, that's the easier door in. It also tends to be the safer one.

How The Stock Lands In Your Account

Index funds track a set list of stocks. The Russell 1000 and the total U.S. market are two big ones.

When a giant like SpaceX goes public, these funds add it. They do it on a set schedule, not all at once.

Russell, FTSE and CRSP indexes can add a mega-cap after five trading days. MSCI takes 10 days.

The Nasdaq 100 adds names that qualify after 15 days. SpaceX is big enough to clear that bar.

Nasdaq and FTSE Russell eased their rules this year. The change lets giant IPOs join faster than before.

So if you own a total market fund, you'll likely own a sliver of SpaceX soon. You won't have to place a single order.

Even then, SpaceX would be a small piece. It might be about 0.1% of a total market fund.

About 86% of 401(k) plans held an index stock fund in 2025. So plenty of retirement savers are in the same boat.

It works like a new player joining an auto-draft. You get them on your roster whether you picked them or not.

We explain how everyday moves like index changes hit your portfolio in Market Briefs, every morning, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

How Active Funds Fit In

Some funds don't wait for the index rules. Active funds pick stocks on their own.

Eight active funds already hold big SpaceX stakes. One Baron fund has 37% of its money in the stock.

That focus cuts both ways. A big stake can boost returns, or sink them if SpaceX falls.

Active funds also cost more than index funds. Higher fees eat into returns over time.

The S&P 500 Will Have To Wait

The most famous index is the S&P 500. Its rules are stricter.

A company must be public for a year to get in. It also has to turn a profit.

SpaceX doesn't clear that bar yet. So it could be years away.

Tesla took about a decade after its IPO to join. SpaceX may follow a slow path too.

Not everyone loves the faster rules elsewhere. Sen. Elizabeth Warren sent index providers a letter that questions them.

She warned the changes could push billions into SpaceX on its own. Index investors would own it without a say.

What To Watch

You can also just buy the shares yourself. That's the cheapest route, but a single stock carries more risk than a basket.

One expert said a new IPO often jumps on day one. Then it tends to lag the market for a few years.

The slow way in might be the safe way in.

Want to know what you already own and why? Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs and get a 45-minute investing course thrown in as a bonus.

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