Musk has challenged traditional IPO norms, aiming to grant retail investors unprecedented access while aggressively pushing for early index inclusion. Despite the company’s massive scale, S&P Global signaled that market capitalization alone cannot bypass requirements regarding financial viability, seasoning, and investible weight factors. This firm stance complicates the debut for a firm poised to reshape the public markets.
S&P Global Rejects Fast-Track Index Inclusion for SpaceX IPO
S&P Global confirmed on Thursday that it will maintain its current eligibility criteria for index inclusion, effectively barring SpaceX from a fast-track entry. The decision sets the stage for a high-stakes standoff as Elon Musk prepares to take the aerospace giant public next week in a historic market debut.

SpaceX is targeting a $75 billion raise, the largest IPO in history, which would value the enterprise at approximately $1.75 trillion. Such a valuation would immediately place the firm among the top 10 most valuable companies listed on U.S. exchanges. By refusing to waive existing rules, index managers are forcing a confrontation over whether the sheer size of a company justifies exceptions to long-standing governance and financial standards.



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