Retail investors are flooding Invesco's QQQ Trust with inquiries about index inclusion methodology — a first in Paul Schroeder's six years covering the product — all because of SpaceX.
The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) and its lower-cost sibling QQQM are recording their most sustained stretch of retail interest in half a decade, driven by anticipation of SpaceX's accelerated entry into the Nasdaq 100. Paul Schroeder, who covers the products at Invesco, told the Animal Spirits podcast that inbound investor curiosity has been "pretty consistent over the last month," compared with a 2023 busy period that lasted about a week and a half. QQQ and QQQM together control 27% of all assets in the US large-cap growth ETF category, according to Invesco data.
The catalyst is a May rule change by Nasdaq that eliminated the one-year seasoning requirement for newly listed companies, allowing SpaceX to join the Nasdaq 100 just 15 trading days after its June 12 IPO. The rocket and satellite company priced at $135 per share, raising $75 billion in the largest IPO on record. J.P. Morgan estimated the inclusion could generate about $4.3 billion in passive inflows from index-tracking funds, according to Reuters. Michael Batnick, a partner at Ritholtz Wealth Management, called the rule change "frankly overdue" given how long companies now stay private before listing.
SpaceX's starting weight in the index will not match its $2 trillion headline market value. Nasdaq uses float-adjusted weighting, and only about 5% of SpaceX shares trade freely — the rest are held by Elon Musk, employees, and pre-IPO venture investors. That keeps the initial weight near 1% to 1.3%, or roughly the same as a typical mid-tier Nasdaq 100 constituent. "Investors will not have to swallow $2 trillion of Elon Musk all at once," Batnick said.
How the Options Market Is Pricing the Event
SpaceX options have been among the most actively traded since the stock's debut, with about half a million contracts changing hands by midday Monday. More than 300,000 calls traded versus fewer than 130,000 puts, a ratio of roughly 5-to-1 favoring bullish bets, according to ThinkOrSwim data. Implied volatility stands at 92, nearly 3.5 times that of QQQ itself, reflecting the extreme uncertainty around a stock with only 15 trading days of public price history.
The most popular single contract Monday was the 450-strike call expiring July 17, a 15-cent trade that requires a 180% rally by next week to break even. Larger institutional traders favored the 180-strike call expiring this Friday, suggesting a near-term directional bet rather than a lottery ticket. SpaceX shares slipped below $160 on Monday after touching a post-IPO high of $225.64, though they remain above the $135 IPO price and the $150 opening print.
What the Frenzy Means for Index Investors
The retail-driven surge in QQQ activity represents a structural shift in how ordinary investors engage with index mechanics. Rather than buying SpaceX directly, they are reverse-engineering the plumbing of passive investing — buying the ETF that will hold the stock. That is a rational strategy, but it also introduces concentration risk. QQQ is up 16% year to date and 29% over the past 12 months, closing Monday at $725.15, and the addition of a single high-volatility name amplifies an already narrow index.
The Nasdaq 100 has already been more volatile than the S&P 500 this year. The Cboe Nasdaq 100 Volatility Index rose about 43% through last Thursday, compared with an 8% rise for the Cboe Volatility Index tied to the S&P 500. SpaceX's small float means large passive orders could trigger sharp price swings when index funds rebalance. Lockup expirations for early investors and employees also sit on the calendar, creating a potential overhang.
Louis Navellier, founder of Navellier & Associates, said he would consider buying SpaceX after insiders sell some shares and once the company appears ready to report a profitable quarter. SpaceX is not expected to enter the S&P 500 soon — S&P Dow Jones Indices did not revise its rules, leaving the company subject to a one-year listing requirement and profitability standards.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.