Nasdaq has indeed changed its rules because of SpaceX; it's amazing how much the exchange is making way for you. Nasdaq has officially announced that it will modify its inclusion rules to allow large companies to be included in its main indices more quickly. New additions: 1) Added a "fast-track admission" feature. Large IPOs can join trading within approximately 15 trading days after listing (previously requiring a 3-month wait). 2) Removed 10% of floating capital. 3) Allowed the issuance of low-float shares (but with a weight cap). 4) Fully transitioned to quarterly, ranking-based rebalancing. 5) Market capitalization now includes both listed and unlisted stocks. These changes will take effect on May 1, 2026. This means that if SpaceX goes public, the company could be included in the Nasdaq 100 index within 15 days of listing, potentially triggering hundreds of billions of dollars in forced buying upon inclusion. Currently, SpaceX's IPO market capitalization is disclosed at $1.5 trillion, aiming to raise $75 billion. With only 5% of its shares in circulation in the six months following the IPO, does this mean there's still room for speculation?
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qinbafrank
@qinbafrank
03-13
SpaceX史上最大IPO,交易所都在修改规则。看华尔街日报说过SpaceX正在与主要指数提供商联系,让Spacex比正常情况更快加入指数。正常情况下,新股上市即使市值满足要求,也IPO后满一年才能被纳入标普500和纳斯达克100指数,正在讨论的规则是: x.com/qinbafrank/sta…


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