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SpaceX goes public Thursday with a possible $5 trillion hit. Here's the calendar that actually matters.

SpaceX prices Wednesday night and opens Thursday on Nasdaq at $135 per share — a $1.77 trillion valuation, the largest IPO ever. Most coverage will frame what comes next as a sentiment trade, an Elon story, or a race to Goldman's $5 trillion bull case. The reality is more grounded and more useful: the next 366 days are governed by an unusually clean calendar of supply releases — when 95.8% of the company can or cannot trade, when index funds add weight, when the lock-up cliff arrives, when Musk himself becomes a potential seller for the first time.
Read the calendar and you've already understood the structure most market commentary will spend the next quarter trying to explain. Here are the 13 dates worth watching.
What the rest of the coverage is getting wrong
Two things keep showing up in headlines that don't survive a careful read.
The first is the idea that index funds are about to be forced into a massive single-event SpaceX buy. They aren't. Nasdaq did create a fast-track inclusion rule that lets SpaceX join the Nasdaq 100 within 15 trading days of IPO — but the same rule caps the weighting at 3× float for low-float names, which for SpaceX (4.2% float) caps the effective weighting at roughly 12.6% of market cap. Real, but not the "$20B+ in 15 days" event some coverage has implied. Analyst estimates for net Nasdaq 100 inflow land in the $10–20B range over the inclusion ramp.
The second is the assumption that S&P 500 inclusion is coming soon. S&P Global refused to change its rules for the flagship index. SpaceX cannot enter the S&P 500 until at least mid-2027 and must show four quarters of positive GAAP earnings first. With Starship R&D running at $3 billion a year and operating losses still negative, the earliest realistic S&P 500 inclusion is 2027 — pushing the largest forced-passive-demand event past the 2026 lock-up cliff entirely. Counterintuitively, that delay creates a cleaner long-term setup, not a worse one.
Both points matter because what's actually driving the structural setup is not forced buyers. It is locked sellers — and the schedule of when those locks release is publicly disclosed.
The 13-date calendar

The Money Person take

Three windows for three time horizons — with a $5 trillion possibility riding on top of all of them.
The first 180 days are structurally biased upward: 95.8% of stock is locked while $175 billion of unfilled demand chases 4.2% of float, with Mars launches adding a fundamental catalyst. Post-cliff drawdowns of 10–25% are then the historical norm. Musk himself stays locked until June 13, 2027 — after which the trade resets to fundamentals: Goldman's $322 billion AI revenue path, Starship economics, orbital data center commercialization. $5 trillion is roughly 2.8× from $135 to about $380. Some of that move is structurally front-loaded into Year 1; the rest depends on whether the fundamental engine fires across 2027–2030.
None of those windows is wrong — they're just different horizons. The wealth-builder's edge is understanding which one matches theirs. The calendar is what's scheduled. $5 trillion is what could happen if execution matches the math.
Ed Wealth Research provides institutional-quality analysis to retail investors. This is not investment advice. SpaceX is a private company until June 12, 2026. All lock-up dates, index inclusion timelines, and Mars mission schedules cited above are based on the SpaceX S-1 filing and public reporting through June 10, 2026; actual dates may shift. Past performance of comparable low-float IPOs does not indicate future results. Verify current ETF holdings via each issuer's fact sheet before purchasing.
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