SpaceX’s stock has surged 55% above its IPO price in just days, driven by technical market factors rather than fundamental performance. This rally is fueled by high demand, a limited share float, and buying pressure from derivatives and institutional investors anticipating its fast-tracked inclusion in major stock market indexes like the Nasdaq-100. While these factors are creating a significant price distortion, analysts warn of a potential “hype tax” and expect the stock to become more sensitive to fundamentals once index inclusions are complete.
SpaceX, the aerospace giant, has seen its stock performance skyrocket, driven not by its core business fundamentals, but by a powerful confluence of technical market factors. In less than three days as a publicly traded company, SpaceX shares have already surged an astonishing 55% above their $135 initial public offering (IPO) price.
The company is on a fast track to join several prominent stock market indexes, including the FTSE Russell, MSCI, and Nasdaq-100. While these inclusions are designed to ground a stock's performance in broader sector fundamentals over time, the weeks leading up to their entry are creating a speculative fervor.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC
These intense market forces, amplified by derivative securities and strategic maneuvers from large institutional investors, are pushing SpaceX's valuation significantly higher. "It's going to be really hard to be negative on this name until you at least get out to the Nasdaq-100 add," noted Dan Niles, founder of Niles Investment Management, to CNBC. "After that, then things like valuation, et cetera, are going to matter, but as we learned during the meme stock craze, valuations can always go much higher than you ever imagined."
High Demand, Scant Supply
The core issue fueling this rally is the immense demand for SpaceX shares coupled with an extremely limited public float. Only 555.6 million shares were sold in last week's IPO, representing a mere 5% of SpaceX's total outstanding stock. An additional 83.3 million shares will become available through the standard 15% overallotment option granted to underwriters.
A much larger block of approximately 911 million insider shares—roughly twice the current public float—is slated to unlock two days after the company's inaugural earnings report, which Morningstar anticipates in early August. Until then, legal restrictions prevent insiders from selling, and many institutional investors who recently acquired the stock are holding onto their positions.
The Power of Technical Pressures
This acute scarcity is intensifying price appreciation as SpaceX prepares for its imminent inclusion in the FTSE Russell, MSCI, and Nasdaq-100 indexes over the coming weeks.
The upward momentum is further bolstered by the activation of derivatives and other secondary financial instruments tied to SpaceX stock. Options on SpaceX began trading this Tuesday, attracting significant volume. Options trader Michael Khouw explained on CNBC, "Market makers buy [a certain number] of shares of the underlying stock for every call they sell, because that will hedge their exposure somewhat. That very act is putting buying pressure on the stock."
Moreover, hedge funds and other sophisticated players are likely accumulating shares to capitalize on the forced buying by passive index funds in the near future. "The price pressure hypothetically comes from hedge funds, arbitrageurs, and other sophisticated participants who, anticipating the passive trackers' demand, collectively buy the entrant ahead of time," analysts at Switzerland-based Concretum Research detailed in a recent paper.
Adding to the fervor, SpaceX leveraged ETFs—funds designed to amplify stock movements through borrowed capital and investments in derivatives—also commenced trading on Monday. Direxion, for instance, launched its Daily SpaceX Bull 2x ETF.
Distortion in a Tiny Float Market
Such technical pressures can persist even after a company enters benchmark indexes, often distorting the price of stocks with minimal public floats, like SpaceX. Payal Shah of CME Group highlighted this in a June 10 note: "When this mechanical, price-agnostic buying of passive funds collides with a constrained public float, it creates intense liquidity strain. This can result in significant price distortion, forcing passive funds to buy shares at elevated valuations shortly after listing."
However, once SpaceX is fully integrated into these indexes, analysts anticipate its stock value will become more responsive to both its industrial sectors and broader macroeconomic indicators. George Karamanos at Rothschild & Co. projected that "Share price momentum is likely to be underpinned by passive fund flows that reflect household savings trends and asset allocation decisions dependent on thematic fundamentals rather than stock-specific ones."
There's also the cautionary tale of a "hype tax." Renaissance Macro Research, specializing in IPOs, points out that spectacularly opening IPOs can often underperform in the long run. "Despite the enthusiasm, performance often disappointed: from the opening trade, the median one-year return was -15.6%, with only 8 of 20 IPOs posting gains after a year," stated analysts led by Jeff deGraaf.
