SpaceX Stock Surges 7% as Russell Inclusion Takes Effect, Nasdaq-100 Entry Set for July 7

SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) surged 7.15% to $164.19 on June 29, 2026, on 79 million shares as Russell index membership took effect and investors positioned ahead of the company's Nasdaq-100 inclusion on July 7. JPMorgan estimates the Nasdaq-100 entry will trigger approximately $4.3 billion in required passive inflows from ETFs including Invesco's QQQ, making SpaceX the fastest addition in Nasdaq-100 history at 15 trading days post-IPO.

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SpaceX SPCX stock surge: Russell index inclusion and Nasdaq-100 entry July 2026

SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) surged 7.15% to $164.19 on June 29, 2026, on volume of 79 million shares, as Russell index membership took effect and passive-fund managers accelerated purchases ahead of an equally significant event: the company's addition to the Nasdaq-100 on July 7, just 15 trading days after its historic IPO debut.

Two index events, one buying wave

SPCX's June 29 session was driven by the convergence of two scheduled, forced-buying events that are largely mechanical and independent of the company's near-term business performance.

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First, Russell index membership became effective today for SpaceX. The annual Russell index reconstitution required funds that track the Russell 1000 and Russell 3000 to add SpaceX shares to their portfolios, concentrating demand into the effective date. SpaceX's implied market capitalization of approximately $2.1 trillion qualifies it for both benchmarks with ample room above the entry threshold.

Second, the Nasdaq exchange confirmed earlier this month that SpaceX will join the Nasdaq-100 on July 7, 2026. That 15-trading-day gap between the June 12 IPO and the July 7 inclusion date sets a record as the fastest addition in the Nasdaq-100's history, per Nasdaq's own announcement. Exchange-traded funds that track the Nasdaq-100, including Invesco's QQQ (roughly $250 billion in assets under management) and QQQM, will be required to purchase SpaceX shares to match the revised index composition. JPMorgan estimates the Nasdaq-100 inclusion will generate approximately $4.3 billion in required passive inflows.

Session breakdown

Trading volume reached 79 million shares on June 29, well above typical daily turnover for a newly public company of SpaceX's size. The heavy volume reflects the mechanical nature of Russell rebalancing: index-tracking funds must transact on or near the effective date to minimize tracking error, concentrating institutional buying into a narrow window. The Nasdaq-100 rebalancing, by contrast, will be spread across the days leading up to and including July 7, as managers execute their rebalances over multiple sessions to reduce market impact.

SPCX reached an all-time high of $225.64 on June 16, four days after its June 12 IPO, before pulling back to $147.11 on June 23 amid a broader market sell-off and investor concern over a concurrent $25 billion SpaceX bond issuance. Today's 7.15% gain brings the stock to $164.19, recovering approximately half of its decline from the all-time high.

Context: SpaceX's IPO and current valuation

SpaceX priced its IPO on June 11, 2026, at $135 per share, raising $75 billion in what became the largest initial public offering in history, per the company's official pricing announcement. The IPO implied a $1.75 trillion valuation. At today's price of $164.19, the implied market capitalization stands at approximately $2.1 trillion. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley led the underwriting. The IPO lock-up for pre-IPO shareholders is expected to expire in late 2026, which investors should watch as a potential source of additional supply.

What to watch next

  • July 7, 2026: Nasdaq-100 effective inclusion date. Index-tracking ETFs and mutual funds must hold SPCX by market close. JPMorgan estimates roughly $4.3 billion in required purchases over the rebalancing window, with the bulk executing on July 7.
  • Late 2026: Lock-up expiration for pre-IPO shareholders. The release of restricted shares could bring additional supply to the market and weigh on the stock price.
  • Q3 2026 earnings: SpaceX's first earnings report as a public company, expected to cover Starlink subscriber and revenue growth, Falcon 9 launch cadence, and Starship development milestones.
  • S&P 500 eligibility: SpaceX will become eligible for S&P 500 consideration once it meets profitability requirements. If added, analysts estimate S&P inclusion would trigger a further round of passive inflows significantly larger than the Nasdaq-100 event.

For full background on the SpaceX IPO, current valuation, and how to buy SPCX, see the SpaceX stock and IPO guide.

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