Key Points
- SpaceX shows preference for Nasdaq as its exchange of choice for a potential June listing
- Rapid inclusion in the Nasdaq 100 ranks high among the company’s requirements for selecting the exchange
- The aerospace company aims for approximately $1.75 trillion in market capitalization, positioning it as America’s sixth-largest firm
- Competition continues between Nasdaq and NYSE for hosting the landmark public offering
- A newly proposed “Fast Entry” mechanism from Nasdaq could enable megacap companies to join the index within weeks
Elon Musk’s aerospace venture, SpaceX, appears ready to take its shares public through the Nasdaq exchange in what promises to be among the most significant initial public offerings in market history.
According to Reuters, four individuals with knowledge of the company’s internal deliberations confirmed that SpaceX currently favors Nasdaq as its listing venue. These sources requested anonymity given the private nature of ongoing discussions.
The aerospace manufacturer has established a target market capitalization of approximately $1.75 trillion for its public debut. This valuation would place SpaceX among America’s elite publicly traded corporations, specifically in sixth position.
SpaceX has communicated to relevant parties that swift admission to the Nasdaq 100 index represents a critical factor in its exchange selection process. The Nasdaq 100 encompasses leading technology corporations worldwide, with constituents including Nvidia, Apple, and Amazon.
Traditional requirements mandate that recently listed companies observe a waiting period of up to one year before becoming eligible for major market indexes such as the Nasdaq 100 or S&P 500.
Nasdaq Unveils Fast Entry Mechanism
Last month, Nasdaq introduced a proposed regulatory change designed to accelerate index admission for major newly public companies. This “Fast Entry” mechanism would permit qualifying companies to join the Nasdaq 100 in less than one month, provided their market capitalization places them within the index’s top 40 constituents.
The regulatory proposal awaits final approval and implementation may require several months. Nasdaq designed this initiative specifically to appeal to highly valued private enterprises such as SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI.
Should SpaceX achieve its $1.75 trillion valuation target, the company would clearly meet the criteria for expedited admission under the proposed framework.
The Strategic Value of Index Membership
Nasdaq 100 membership provides companies with exposure to substantial institutional capital deployed through index-tracking investment vehicles. This translates into broader ownership distribution and enhanced trading liquidity over the long term.
For existing SpaceX stakeholders and employee shareholders, improved market liquidity could minimize price disruption when substantial share volumes become tradeable following mandatory lockup expirations. Standard lockup agreements typically extend between 90 and 180 days following an initial public offering.
The New York Stock Exchange remains actively engaged in pursuing the SpaceX listing opportunity. Sources indicate that neither exchange has received formal notification of a final selection.
Reuters previously disclosed that SpaceX has targeted June as a potential timeframe for its public market entry. Earlier this year, Bloomberg reported the company was exploring a dual-class share structure that would preserve Musk’s operational control, mirroring the governance arrangement he maintains at Tesla despite minority ownership.
The Nasdaq 100 index delivered approximately 21% returns during the previous calendar year and has recorded modest declines through the current period in 2026.

