
The modern IPO process has evolved from a mechanism for raising growth capital into a liquidity event for private equity insiders, fundamentally altering market dynamics. This shift creates significant distortions when massive, thin-float companies like SpaceX receive accelerated inclusion into major indexes like the NASDAQ 100. By bypassing traditional waiting periods and applying artificial weighting multipliers, index providers force passive funds to act as large-scale buyers, which risks inflating prices and undermining true price discovery. Dave Nadig, President and Director of Research at ETF.com, highlights how these rule changes transform passive indices into active trading vehicles, potentially penalizing long-term investors. To restore market integrity, index inclusion should prioritize full free-float adjustments and require established trading histories, ensuring that passive portfolios are not subject to the volatility inherent in these high-stakes, pre-planned liquidity events.
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