Capital Markets Analysis · Index Mechanics · Good Money
When index rules manufacture scarcity, pension funds become AI's piggy bank — and ordinary savers pay the price.
The SpaceX IPO on June 12, 2026 reached a $2.44 trillion market cap — not because of earnings, but because of engineered index mechanics. Three Nasdaq rule changes created artificial scarcity, forcing pension funds and index investors to buy at any price. Meanwhile, profitable rocket and satellite revenues quietly subsidise a loss-making AI division. Two more trillion-scale IPOs are queued behind it.
Nasdaq quietly restructured the entry rules for its flagship index, compressing timelines and inflating effective demand far beyond what the market actually supplies. The result is mechanical buying pressure disconnected from intrinsic value.
Previously, new listings waited months before Nasdaq-100 inclusion. Now just 15 trading days. This accelerates forced buying by index funds, regardless of valuation.
Historically a 10% public float was required. SpaceX entered with ~7% float — meaning the vast majority of shares remain locked with insiders, yet still qualified.
Nasdaq applies a notional multiplier of up to 3× to small floats. A 7% float is treated as 21%, magnifying demand far beyond actual supply.
Prices surge — not because of intrinsic value, but because of mechanical demand. Savers and pensions end up buying into inflated valuations, hoping scarcity itself will drive future gains. — Good Money · Capital Markets Analysis
Behind the headline $2.44 trillion valuation, SpaceX's fundamentals tell a more complicated story. Its profitable divisions — Starlink broadband and government rocket launches — are quietly being drained to fund a deeply loss-making AI infrastructure division operating under the xAI umbrella.
$11.4B revenue with $4.4B operating profit. The profitable engine powering the rest of the enterprise.
$4.1B revenue, loss of $657M. State-funded contracts from NASA and the DoD prop up what is structurally unprofitable.
$818M in Q1 2026 revenue against a –$2.47B loss. Full-year 2025 AI losses reached –$6.35B. Pure cash burn.
SpaceX is effectively an AI cash-burning vehicle, subsidised by state-funded launch contracts and the profits of Starlink. The rocket is the brand; the satellite is the engine; AI is the destination for your pension money — whether you asked for it or not.
SpaceX is not alone. BlackRock's CEO Larry Fink has openly stated that AI will be funded with pension, savings, and insurance money. Two more trillion-scale IPOs are already in the queue, each requiring more than 50% annual revenue growth to justify their current valuations.
$18.7B revenue, –$4.94B net loss. 95× trailing revenue multiple. Profitable Starlink division draining into AI losses of –$6.35B in 2025.
~$47B annualised revenue run rate. Requires >50% annual growth to justify valuation. Same structural playbook as SpaceX.
~$25B annualised revenue, >$14B in losses in 2026. Profitability not expected until ~2030. Your pension is invited to wait.
This smells like yet another robbery of the people — just like fiat money with its Cantillon Effect and Bitcoin after its hijacking by the elite. Index rules and automatic allocations ensure retirement accounts chase these valuations, even when fundamentals are weak. — Good Money · @BartGoodMoney
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Value derived from mechanical index demand and locked float. Prices surge without earnings. Ordinary savers fund trillion-dollar experiments via forced allocation.
Superior to fiat, but rests on two simultaneous assumptions: fiat must continue depreciating and Bitcoin must continue appreciating. Vulnerable to Black Swans on either front.
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Every certificate is redeemable at all times for the underlying value-stock assets. Price cannot drift from real value — no political discretion, no debt backing.
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