Two weeks. That’s how long it took for the largest IPO in history to force its way into the most widely tracked equity benchmarks on earth.
SpaceX (SPCX) is being added to FTSE Russell’s U.S. indexes after today’s close, triggering what analysts estimate could be between $3 billion and $27 billion in forced passive buying – most of it concentrated at today’s closing price. The Nasdaq 100 addition follows on July 6. When QQQ is involved, the math gets considerably larger.
Here’s what’s interesting. Most of the conversation this week has been about the index mechanics. The flow, the timing, the ETF implications. Fair enough – that stuff is real and it matters. But the index event is probably the least important thing happening with this stock right now.
The Starlink mobile disclosure is the part nobody is fully pricing.
During the IPO roadshow, SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell told investors the company is considering a full retail Starlink mobile product – and may eventually build its own terrestrial U.S. mobile network. That’s not a satellite supplement to T-Mobile’s coverage gaps. That’s a direct challenge to Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile as consumer mobile carriers. The domestic mobile market has hundreds of millions of potential subscribers and tens of billions in annual revenue at stake.
Slight tangent, but it matters: SpaceX already has more than 10 million Starlink subscribers across 160 countries after growing from just 2.3 million at the end of 2023. The average revenue per subscriber actually fell 18% during that growth phase – a deliberate trade of pricing for volume. In May 2026, the company reversed course and raised plan prices by up to $10 per month. That’s what a company looks like when it decides it’s done acquiring and ready to monetize.
The business underneath the valuation is more coherent than critics admit.
Starlink contributed $11.4 billion of SpaceX’s $18.67 billion in 2025 revenue and generated $7.2 billion in adjusted EBITDA for the connectivity segment – up 86% year over year. The margins look closer to software than hardware. Once the constellation is in orbit, incremental subscribers add high-margin recurring revenue at near-zero marginal cost. That’s a fundamentally different economic model than launching rockets.
The company also carries a $41.3 billion cumulative loss since 2002, controls its own voting structure with Elon Musk retaining roughly 83.5% of voting power, and has already acquired xAI – bringing Grok, a fleet of data centers, and the social network formerly known as Twitter into the same corporate envelope. The risk profile here is genuinely complex.
What investors are missing is the sequencing. The index event forces broad ownership starting Monday. The Nasdaq 100 addition a week later forces a second wave, with QQQ managing over $300 billion in assets. The Starlink mobile ambition, if it progresses, rewrites the total addressable market entirely. SpaceX’s own prospectus claims a $28.5 trillion TAM, mostly tied to AI enterprise applications – a place the company barely operates in today.
Whether that’s achievable or not almost doesn’t matter for the near term. What matters is that passive exposure is now automatic for anyone holding a broad U.S. equity index fund. The question isn’t whether to own it. For index investors, that decision was already made for them.
The part worth watching isn’t the forced buying. It’s whether the business, two years from now, looks like Starlink the satellite ISP – or Starlink the mobile carrier that quietly took a seat at a $200 billion annual revenue table nobody expected it to enter.
