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lucd 4 hours ago [-]
The worst about the SpaceX IPO is Nasdaq changing their inclusion rules for the Nasdaq 100. The index fast-tracked SpaceX stock for inclusion 15 days after the IPO, instead of the normal three-month seasoning period. They also changed its 10% minimum float rule to a 3x weighting boost for low-float stockss.
So many people will unwillingly and prematurely invest into SpaceX, before it has any chance to discover its real price.
IE: The floating, 5% at launch, could attain 30% end august, if Nasdaq didn't change their rules it would have included SpaceX after this..
So, the inclusion rules are basically "these are the hard limits that specify which stocks are eligible, unless someone really big and lucrative comes along, in which case it's whatever and we'll just adjust the rules to make them eligible"?
bko 1 hours ago [-]
I think the rules are there are hard limits unless a multi-trillion dollar company IPOs with a significant absolute float, in which case tracking the "market" obviously includes said company.
HPMOR 1 hours ago [-]
Yeah, this is correct. There are so many large multi-trillion dollar companies coming to IPO, which if your are passive index holder and you are trying to track the market it is correct for these companies to be included. And besides SPY has chosen not to fast track where QQQ has. It is a free market, and folks are free to NOT buy QQQ. So I'm not sure why this is a point of debate.
torginus 6 minutes ago [-]
My (non-motivated, don't have NASDAQ or SpaceX) take is that isn't this how these funds are supposed to behave? You buy NASDAQ if you can take risk, S&P otherwise. If you check out what companies are in the NASDAQ, it's not like it's not majority tech, of which a lot of them are AI-based, so adding SpaceX to that mix is reasonable - and if they waited a year or so for price discovery, and had SpaceX been a popular choice (still can turn out like that), then investors would've missed out on those gains.
alistairSH 17 minutes ago [-]
"People" in this instance aren't always informed buyers. Sometimes they're buying an index fund because they don't have the time to research individual stocks and sometimes it's their pension investing.
The normal seasoning period is there for a reason. There is a massive downside to premature inclusion of a stock that is initially overvalued and then settles to a reasonable/sustainable value.
jt2190 2 minutes ago [-]
[delayed]
marcosdumay 2 hours ago [-]
"Lucrative" is not really the word you are looking for.
tavavex 2 hours ago [-]
What do you mean? I was under the impression that including SPCX has been massively beneficial for Nasdaq. It creates lots of trading volume and sends a quiet signal to other massive tech companies looking to IPO to come to them, rules be damned. So they're definitely extremely lucrative for Nasdaq.
gizzlon 2 hours ago [-]
I the short term. Who knows what the damage to the brand will cost them.
fhn 1 hours ago [-]
"Honest"
ratelimitsteve 30 minutes ago [-]
Turns out all the rules of our society are "hard limits unless someone with a lot of money disagrees at which point they become negotiable".
Retric 2 hours ago [-]
Not quite, you can get them changed if you’re willing to announce to everyone that your stock is wildly overvalued and is going to crash.
Obscurity4340 2 hours ago [-]
Less of an issue in fascistic dictatorships—time will tell
bell-cot 47 minutes ago [-]
"Everyone has a price." - Pablo Escobar
32 minutes ago [-]
jgalt212 3 hours ago [-]
reality distortion field in full effect.
bix6 3 hours ago [-]
Isn’t that how capitalism works in general?
Edit: thanks for the downvotes. Defenders of capitalism unite!!! lol. Free market right?
christophilus 2 hours ago [-]
It’s how the world works in general. Bribes and corruption are not unique to capitalism.
phil21 2 hours ago [-]
No. This is how crony-capitalism works.
You could make a decent argument that capitalism will very likely end-game devolve into crony-capitalism as it's typical failure mode, but I don't think it's written in stone.
It's funny to me. Everyone rails about Atlas Shrugged being some libertarian fantasy story. I always read it as an allegory warning about crony capitalism and how it ruins society along with a story about trains and magical perpetual motion machines.
3997531578 26 minutes ago [-]
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shevy-java 2 hours ago [-]
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smallmancontrov 3 hours ago [-]
You're forgetting that whenever the incentives lead to bad places it isn't True Capitalism (tm).
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
True capitalism has never been tried. This right now is crony capitalism.
1 hours ago [-]
mikelitoris 2 hours ago [-]
Sounds like no true scotsman.
Remember kids: socialism is judged by how it failed in real life, capitalism is judged by how perfect it is in theory
wredcoll 2 hours ago [-]
The term "capitalism" was literally only created for the purpose of writing criticisms of the (then) current system of markets/trading/taxing/investing.
Try actually defining capitalism in a way that doesn't apply to basically any random society since the dawn of agriculture.
Stuff like people buying and selling items using a currency for a price the individual chooses has been common to basically every human society we have written records for.
The formalization of the process of buying shares in a company and receiving dividends/profits as a result is a bit newer, but the general concept of "I give you money, you use it to make something and sell it then give me money back" has been around for roughly the same amount of time as currency itself.
Anyways, my point is that there is a lot of things to criticize about our current world/economy, using the term "capitalism" while doing so is too vague to be useful in any way.
(Communism/socialism does have more of an actual definition, but very few people are aware of or use it, so it doesn't help all that much).
danudey 1 hours ago [-]
Saw an interesting discussion on how capitalism has existed for as long as markets have existed, including ancient Greece, and how it inevitably leads to wealth inequality, monopolistic behavior, unsustainable resource extraction, and all the other negatives we see today. The only difference is that in Greece, all of these negatives would have been applied locally but now they're all being applied globally. Instead of one super-wealthy man being a pain in the ass for the local Athens economy, he can now ruin things for everyone everywhere.
wredcoll 57 minutes ago [-]
I would more simply define that as "wealth inequality" rather than capitalism (or more broadly, power inequality) and perhaps go on to say that the real problem is that, while you can't realistically prevent/remove all inquality, most systems do a poor job of preventing the people with more money/power from using that to consistently increase their own share.
alistairSH 12 minutes ago [-]
Pretty sure Adam Smith captured that in his writings.
Full laissez-faire, free market capitalism generally leads to wealth (and power) imbalance. Regulation is necessary to prevent that (assuming you want to maintain a "fair" democracy of sorts and not regress to oligarchy).
atmosx 58 minutes ago [-]
Nah, Ancient Greece has nothing to do with today’s capitalism. It’s a dumb example and the parallels will fall down to a close inspection. Different world.
thewebguyd 39 minutes ago [-]
> Stuff like people buying and selling items using a currency for a price the individual chooses has been common to basically every human society we have written records for.
That's a market economy, which may or may not be capitalist. Markets have existed for thousands of years under various economic systems.
Agree on your other points though, 'capitalism' was coined to just describe and criticize the system they saw emerging, one of private ownership of the means of production, combined with wage workers who do not own their tools or the product of their labor, but instead sell their time.
But its hard to have discussions around because too many people conflate "market economy" == "capitalism" but you can have markets in a feudalist, socialist, communist, any other society, that doesn't inherently make them capitalist. But I still think its useful as a term, but only to specifically describe who owns the capital.
sebastiennight 1 hours ago [-]
> Try actually defining capitalism in a way that doesn't apply to basically any random society since the dawn of agriculture.
.. feudalism?
Which, AFAIK, lasted much longer, and is just not the same thing?
wredcoll 1 hours ago [-]
History.com says:
> Feudalism is a term often used to describe the social, economic and political conditions that existed in Western Europe during the Middle Ages. At its core, it was a system in which a landowner, or lord, granted a piece of land called a fief to a subordinate known as a vassal. In return, the vassal pledged loyalty to the lord, providing labor, military service, payments—or a mix of these.
And then the next paragraph goes on to say that historians think this is way too simple to describe what real people were actually doing.
Either way, unless every single piece of property in the kingdom (including, like, plows and mill stones and spinning wheels) was granted by the king (or someone he had granted to) it seems like there's still a lot of room for buying/selling/investing.
I mean, it's an interesting answer but my basic point is that the "real world" is far too complex for a term like capitalism to be at all useful.
Even stuff like "free market", can a market be "free" if a government exists? What about monopolies? Etc etc.
I just want people to be more specific when they criticize systems!
qeternity 2 hours ago [-]
Empirically this isn't true. However you feel about "true" capitalism vs socialism, countries underpinned by capitalism have prospered, even the socialist flavors (China, Scandinavia)...while the countries that have attempted pure socialism have all failed.
thewebguyd 2 hours ago [-]
The problem with that logic is you're treating economic systems as if they all exist in a vacuum, and you're setting up a circular argument of if its successful its actually because capitalism, if it fails it must have been socialism.
It completely ignores the decades of external hostility toward any nation that attempted to build a socialist economy. Almost every attempt has been met with near immediate intervention from captialist super powers, particularly the USA. Nixon activeley worked to cause the military coup in Chile, Cuba has faced the longest trade embargo in modern history (and yet still managed to outperform its peers in the region in healthcare and literacy). Its unscientific to attribute these struggles purely to internal failure when they are subject to deliberate economic warfare.
Secondly, your definitions are being stretched to fit your thesis. Scandinavia is not "socialist flavored" it IS a social democracy, with free markets. Claiming China's success is from captialism is ignoring that its economy relies entirely on state owned land, state owned and controlled banks, and state owned companies, and mandatory five year plans coming from the state.
If we classify any successful state-led initiative as "capitalist" and any blockaded, intervened upon state as "purely socialist" then the argument is an unfalsifiable truism.
exhumet 58 minutes ago [-]
agreed. its almost like... we need a healthy mix of economic systems to prosper
tavavex 2 hours ago [-]
We're living under true capitalism right now. Look at the incentives. I don't see how we could have progressed to anything besides this, this is the natural outcome of the system in place.
American libertarians often imagine some kind of wonderland capitalism where everyone agrees to play by the rules that aren't enforced by anyone. To my knowledge this has never existed as a long-term equilibrium and it can't exist. I've yet to meet anyone who can tell me how their imaginary ideas go up against claims like
1. Encouraging infinite growth with no controls or limits will always lead to monopolism and is a one-way ratchet
2. Power vacuums are always filled (no public government leads to private companies stepping in and taking the dictatorial role, this time without any of the democracy)
3. Power always corrupts
DoesntMatter22 34 minutes ago [-]
The United States is far more socialist than capitalist and it’s not close. In the early 1900s the federal tax rate was 0. Now we spend 125% of what we bring in in taxes. That is definitely not capitalism. That’s not a free market, that is the government spending far beyond what’s even feasible
Analemma_ 28 minutes ago [-]
What does the relative level of government spending versus taxation have to do with whether businesses will self-regulate? You're just spewing non sequiturs here.
DoesntMatter22 21 minutes ago [-]
They said we live under true capitalism right now we I’m clearly showing we do not. Not to mentions the US is far from “self regulating” there are millions of words of regulation in the US.
BigTTYGothGF 2 hours ago [-]
Crony capitalism is just regular capitalism.
bmicraft 2 hours ago [-]
Ah yes, because capitalism in it's purest form would never have companies form monopolies and lobby governments for favorable legislation.
adrianN 2 hours ago [-]
Is there even a government under true capitalism or is it more like the lunar anarchy described in „the moon is a harsh mistress“?
wredcoll 2 hours ago [-]
What even is "true capitalism"?
danudey 1 hours ago [-]
Usually "true capitalism" means one of two things:
1. Capitalism where there is no government or regulatory interference, and the "invisible hand of the free market" produces some kind of utopian society based purely on every business abiding by rules enforced by no one, where somehow corporations don't take advantage of workers they way they do now despite there being no laws against it.
2. The same thing but sarcastically because it's obvious that that system would be demonstrably worse than the restricted version of capitalism that we have now.
leonidasrup 21 minutes ago [-]
The "invisible hand of the free market" works only, if you have many market participants competing one against another. When a participant wins the competition you get monopoly, when multiple participants collude you get oligopoly, or cartel. Market can not solve this.
Under True Capitalism™, cartels could do their price fixing on reality shows.
overtone1000 2 hours ago [-]
End stage True Capitalism™ is when you have to subscribe to a streaming service to watch as the streaming service cartel fixes their prices.
shevy-java 2 hours ago [-]
Where does capitalism mandate corruption? Yes, it is not realistic to assume there is no corruption, but capitalism in and by itself does not mandate corruption.
Obviously this all falls apart when capitalism can buy legislation. We are seeing how the USA is currently eroded by a few oligarchs.
tavavex 2 hours ago [-]
They're not saying it 'mandates' it as law, but that the systematic incentives inevitably lead to corruption. The ability to buy government is irrelevant - this is just the easiest method right now of converting money into power. If there was no government to buy, private business would execute that conversion themselves by ruling over people and enforcing their wishes directly.
pasc1878 2 hours ago [-]
Anything that involves humans will have corruption.
Society needs somethings to try to stop corruption wehther government rules or non government actions.
Under pure capitalism what stops this?
3997531578 26 minutes ago [-]
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stymaar 2 hours ago [-]
> True capitalism has never been tried
“True communism has never been tried”
ratelimitsteve 28 minutes ago [-]
Crony capitalism is true capitalism. The idea that capitalists will simply choose not to organize to benefit their own positions out of some sense of altruism is insanely naive, and puts you in the same camp as USSR apologists claiming that their issue was the lack of true communism. A system that fails when people subvert it to their own benefit is a system that fails.
2 hours ago [-]
aplummer 2 hours ago [-]
Does seem a bit like; we’ve never tried roasting people at 1200C, only at 1000C
moomin 2 hours ago [-]
True Capitalism looks a lot more like socialism than many would like to admit.
dragontamer 2 hours ago [-]
> The directors with of such [joint-stock] companies, however, being the managers rather of other people's money than of their own, it cannot well be expected, that they should watch over it with the same anxious vigilance with which the partners in a private copartnery frequently watch over their own
Adam Smith, the Wealth of Nations
The_Blade 2 hours ago [-]
reap the profits, socialize the losses
SaltyBackendGuy 2 hours ago [-]
That's crony capitalism again
aeternum 2 hours ago [-]
The beauty of capitalism is you have a choice. There are already ETFs that exclude SpaceX/Elon's company's for those who so desire.
See QQNE and SPNE.
georgemcbay 2 hours ago [-]
In practice the choices tend to be limited for a lot of the people for whom this rule change was meant to ensnare their money because it exists within 401k plans with limited portfolio options.
aeternum 57 minutes ago [-]
Right but that's because you've now layered in government control. 401k plans are more heavily regulated, often negotiated by the employer rather than the employee.
The real question is why are employers able to limit employee 401k investment choices and employee health insurance. This is not freedom.
nDRDY 2 hours ago [-]
Can this be called "Capitalism" when SpaceX is now a public company?
qeternity 2 hours ago [-]
Public in this context just means publicly listed on a stock exchange.
It does not mean it is state-owned.
fdsajfkldsfklds 50 minutes ago [-]
State ownership is just a proxy for public ownership.
randallsquared 2 hours ago [-]
The word "public" doesn't mean that in this case. It's still a private company.
fouc 4 hours ago [-]
Nasdaq, FTSE Russell, and CRSP all implemented fast-track options. Fortunately S&P kept its 12-month requirement.
lokar 2 hours ago [-]
CRSP has always had a short waiting period, they did not change it.
They did lower the free float rule
dmoy 2 hours ago [-]
Free float rule was pretty low already for ftse, yea? Like we went through this with aramco still has free float under 3%, yet it's in vxus.
infecto 3 hours ago [-]
Is this really the worst thing? People keep bringing this up but it’s the Nasdaq 100. It would be shocking if we were talking about the SP500.
baggachipz 3 hours ago [-]
It almost was. S&P decided against it at the last minute, despite saying they would initially.
quickthrowman 3 hours ago [-]
The S&P committee never said they would. Space X asked and the committee said no. They should not have asked.
rconti 3 hours ago [-]
#1 rule of sales. If someone is trying to sell you something, you _probably_ don't want it. Eg, they need the sale more than you do.
The very fact that they were asking the question is such a huge red flag.
inigyou 3 hours ago [-]
Them needing it more than you doesn't mean you don't need it too.
Bought an air mattress recently. Way better than a sleeping bag on the ground, even though I can also manage that.
marcosdumay 2 hours ago [-]
The most insistent the salesman, the highest odds you got a bad deal.
But we are thread is about corruption (probably with bribes, and stealing the money of people that didn't participate on the transaction), while everybody keeps pretending is a consensual sale.
pessimizer 2 hours ago [-]
Did you buy it from a door-to-door salesman, or did you seek it out?
fecal_henge 2 hours ago [-]
See, a positive outcome from investing in inflated stock.
floren 2 hours ago [-]
I've started telling basically that to the solar salesmen who come by every few days: if it was so great, you wouldn't have to pretend to be from PG&E or tell a bunch of half-truths about how utilities work.
DesiLurker 2 hours ago [-]
problem with solar is that in itself it is great, but here in US if you look at the cost per watt produced it is heavily inflated with permitting and marketing costs. which is basically their margins till it becomes barely profitable to you. otherwise most of solar system cost has been fallen quite a bit for last decade plus.
dont believe me, look up how much a open loop DIY system costs.
floren 7 minutes ago [-]
Oh yeah solar is getting good but the guys who come to your door and say they'll give you a $0 electric bill just sign here are peddling something that's maximally profitable for them
groundzeros2015 3 hours ago [-]
It went through the formal process to adopt. Almost certainly public discussion online had an influence.
quickthrowman 3 hours ago [-]
They don’t meet the inclusion criteria. The committee went through the motions to be diplomatic, not because there was ever a chance of it happening.
FireBeyond 2 hours ago [-]
No, but they did hold research sessions and they did draft the policy and the rules and all the updates and have them go through legal... they were planning to, until they saw public sentiment, or other influence. It'd be misleading to claim it was never a consideration.
khurs 3 hours ago [-]
Yes
Index and other funds are forced to buy as their contractual mandate is to follow the index or methodology set out by the fund.
lokar 2 hours ago [-]
They have some flexibility.
And beyond that there is a lot of capital in active funds that use an index as their benchmark. So they don’t have to buy anything, but they are trying to beat their benchmark so not buying is an active decision with risk.
These are all products that people and funds can choose to buy or not buy.
dghlsakjg 2 hours ago [-]
I'm going to assume this question was in good faith, and ignore that you are seemingly spamming it as a 'gotcha' all over this discussion.
If I'm already invested, and they change the rules on me in a way I don't like, I have to sell, and that's a taxable event.
So if I have invested in a Nasdaq index, and I don't want a massive exposure to SpaceX prematurely, I am forced to close my position and immediately pay taxes on the profits. I pay the taxes, and now my investing capital is reduced because Elon wanted to force index funds to buy SpaceX stock, which indirectly forces all current owners to buy SpaceX.
It's not future buyers so much as people that are already exposed, and were probably not counting on getting rug pulled by the Nasdaq.
So no, you are correct that no one new to investing is forced to own SpaceX stock, but millions of existing fund holders are now exposed to a stock in a way that simply wasn't possible when they put their money in, and will be penalized if they don't want that.
Symbiote 2 hours ago [-]
People already own them, and have owned them for months or years before the rules were changed for SpaceX.
There's a cost to selling, the brokerage fee plus in many countries there's then taxes due on any profits. Many people would prefer to have unrealized gains where they can pay the tax years ahead, when they need the money.
(Also please don't make the same comment 4+ times.)
wpasc 2 hours ago [-]
leaving the word 'forced' aside (purposefully), pension funds, 401k holders, and many passive investors end up buying these things. you're right that no one is "forcing" them, but people who try to invest responsibly with little control over the day-to-day which is most people place trust in the institutions who do that investing for them.
I don't think that the claim of "the Nasdaq is misusing their institutional trust" is a controversial claim. Moreover, one of the things that people choose when they (401k, pension funds, passive investors) is institutional mechanisms that prevent potentially mispriced items from entering their portfolios.
deaton 1 hours ago [-]
The problem is a lot of passive investors own large quantities of that ETF, and to take their money out now they have to pay a tax penalty, so they are forced to invest in SPCX due to the rule change.
Its also a matter of principle. They had a seasoning period to allow for market price discovery over time, and they created a process to waive it for one company. Its not unreasonable to say that that is a bad thing.
stackghost 3 hours ago [-]
Index funds, for starters.
tjwebbnorfolk 2 hours ago [-]
Contrary to (apparently) popular opinion, index funds are not people.
rmunn 2 hours ago [-]
Correct. Index funds are owned by people. For example, I have invested a large chunk of my retirement savings in an S&P 500 indexed fund (as many, many other people do). Whatever stocks the S&P 500 list, are what I end up owning; if I don't want to own one of those, I have to either roll that money into a different fund (which IIRC has limits, can't do that too often without tax consequences) or take the money out (and pay a tax penalty for withdrawing it before retirement).
So whether the index funds do or don't buy a certain stock has direct implications for real, non-millionaire, people.
moomin 2 hours ago [-]
No, they're just owned by people. Most of whom aren't billionaires.
quickthrowman 3 hours ago [-]
I don’t even have access to a NASDAQ fund in my 401K. You have to go out of your way to buy the NASDAQ 100, QQQ and /NQ or /MNQ futures are the most popular instruments for getting exposure.
I have a tiny minute slice of SPCX from owning VTI total market ETF but my 401K holds no SpaceX.
malfist 3 hours ago [-]
Okay? Just because you don't have access to that investment vehicle doesn't mean others aren't using it. What type of reasoning is this? "I, personally, am not too badly effected, therefore it's not a problem"
And guess what, your VTI which does track NASDAQ as part of it's index is effected by this inclusion rule.
danielmarkbruce 2 hours ago [-]
His reasoning is valid. Compared to the S&P500, it's a small sum of money. Most people aren't buying a fund that tracks that nasdaq index. The total effect isn't that large.
malfist 2 hours ago [-]
His reasoning isn't valid.
Not only is he wrong that it doesn't impact him, because VTI is impacted, but the whole premise is wrong. "I'm not harmed" does not mean things are fine. If I go murder your neighbor, will you come to my trial and demand I go free because you weren't harmed? Should the judge let me go because he wasn't harmed?
stackghost 3 hours ago [-]
>QQQ and /NQ or /MNQ futures are the most popular instruments for getting exposure.
QQQ tracks the Nasdaq 100. It's an index fund. If the index includes a new ticker, then QQQ has to buy it.
Buying QQQ doesn't seem like going out of one's way. I don't understand your comment. "ETFs and chill" is a very common investment strategy.
lokar 2 hours ago [-]
You could buy QQNE :)
quickthrowman 2 hours ago [-]
There’s an order of magnitude more money indexed to the S&P 500, you have to go out out your way to buy QQQ since NASDAQ 100 and total market funds are uncommon in 401K options for employees.
QQQ is more volatile and higher risk than the S&P 500, the people buying it should understand that.
tjwebbnorfolk 2 hours ago [-]
And who is forced to buy QQQ?
lokar 2 hours ago [-]
Many retirement accounts have limited options, leaving few passive index options. I sort of doubt many would offer qqq but not s&p, but it’s possible
stackghost 2 hours ago [-]
I'm not sure why that's relevant. The original discussion was about who's forced to buy NDX 100 stocks like SpaceX. The answer to that is "index funds".
Asked and answered. Whatever cute point you're trying to make is rendered moot by real market dynamics and index inclusion rules.
wredcoll 2 hours ago [-]
Why was musk/spacex so interested in having the rules broken to include spacex stock? Do you think maybe there was a reason that involved musk benefitting??
NetMageSCW 3 hours ago [-]
Who forces them?
malfist 3 hours ago [-]
Literally the index. If you track the NASDAQ as part of your index you must obey it's inclusion rules.
tjwebbnorfolk 2 hours ago [-]
Contrary to (apparently) popular opinion, index funds are not people.
So, who is being forced to buy that index?
rossng 2 hours ago [-]
A lot of employer pensions will have limited fund options. (At least in the UK, maybe the US works differently.)
Quite likely that the only sensible one for most people (~global equities) will track S&P 500 internally. So essentially employees are being forced to hold whatever the index includes.
Hopefully it's less of a problem with Nasdaq, but it was a real worry.
pessimizer 2 hours ago [-]
Turns out people (and institutions like municipalities and pension funds) sometimes buy index funds before SpaceX enters the NASDAQ 100, and changing their policies over a single event would be a great effort and expense, and set a bad precedent. Sounds crazy, but it's true.
Nobody has any idea what point you're trying to make, and the fact that you're repeating yourself and not being clearer makes everyone suspect that you don't have any idea either.
hk__2 3 hours ago [-]
Ok but there are very few indices following NASDAQ, compared to S&P 500.
Funds often have institutional investors. Many of them Pension Funds (i.e. ordinary every day people) and when the institutional investors signed up, they didn't do so expecting Nasdaq rule change.
jovial_cavalier 3 hours ago [-]
that is the whole point of an index fund - they buy whatever is in the index so you can get exposure to the total market. The scandalous thing is that an IPO'd company is going to have a lot of volatility for weeks to months after it goes public, so they typically do not allow any newly listed company to be included in the index for up to one year. This is for the benefit of retail. People have put their entire life savings into these funds because they are viewed as the optimal tradeoff between risk and return. Those people are now contractually obligated to either sell everything or expose themselves to spacex's IPO price movements.
metadat 3 hours ago [-]
There are many different kinds of index funds, most don’t participate in Nasdaq 100.
runarberg 3 hours ago [-]
So you are saying it could have been worse, and therefor it is not that bad. I feel like this may be a logical fallacy.
It is like saying that the worst thing about twin earthquakes in Venezuela was not the fact that there were two of them, because there could have been three.
qpricjalcbeu 2 hours ago [-]
Idk, I kinda agree with Matt Levine. The purpose of these ETFs is conceptually to track the "largest X companies", so including SPCX is just staying true to that.
If there's an issue I think it's earlier in the IPO pipeline.
danudey 1 hours ago [-]
But if SpaceX valuation drops by 2/3 before settling into a steady state, does that not mean that SpaceX is not one of the "largest X companies" but rather was overvalued?
The entire reason for these seasoning periods is to give the market time to determine what the company is actually worth to the market itself. Bypassing those rules to get it in earlier says to me that they don't believe it will settle at a price near its start.
If I IPO my lemonade stand at $1T valuation do I deserve to be in that "largest X companies" list? Or does it only make sense if I can maintain that valuation over time?
qpricjalcbeu 1 hours ago [-]
But then you're trying to time the market which goes against the passiveness approach that most people sign up to when they buy these sort of ETFs.
atmosx 55 minutes ago [-]
Well if you helped the US gov get elected than probably that lemonade “deserves” the valuation… if not, well, it’s just lemonade…
colechristensen 2 hours ago [-]
The indices driving the market are the problem.
Index investing is too high a percentage of total investing so the rules matter to the whole market.
gWPVhyxPHqvk 1 hours ago [-]
I think a lot of people are upset that they bought something (an ETF or fund that tracks an index, for which has various rules for what gets included) and those rules get broken so the wealthiest man in the world who is also extremely close with the President of the US can get his company included on a shorter timeline. Yes, there's an issue with the IPO process but a) you can just buy SPCX if you wanted exposure b) even if it's not included you're getting decent exposure and c) the IPO process being broken is not the problem of the indexer.
JumpCrisscross 28 minutes ago [-]
> worst about the SpaceX IPO is Nasdaq changing their inclusion rules
Nasdaq 100 has always been marketed as a tech-forward index. It would be a bit ridiculous if they didn’t include the most value tech companies on the market.
There was a potential scandal at S&P. But it didn’t happen. My personal guess is a lot of finance influencers latched onto this story. When it didn’t pan out they tried to maintain credibility by shifting it onto the Nasdaq 100, where it doesn’t make sense.
yobutdude 23 minutes ago [-]
They changed the rules for one person.
You are the biggest simp for the rich.
They pay you to post here in their defense?
Discourse on this site is no better than Twitter or Reddit, just another flavor of stupid.
tossandthrow 2 hours ago [-]
IMHO it is prudent to allocate a bit more conservatively these days.
I cut out my nasdaq100 and have generally allocated towards ex us
ratelimitsteve 32 minutes ago [-]
Sorta invalidates the whole market to know that they'll change the rules in order to manufacture the result that they have pre-ordained to be "correct". NASDAQ seems to have decided that they're in the business of picking winners and losers rather than simply providing people the mechanisms by which to decide for themselves.
_ink_ 3 hours ago [-]
I am really curious for what reason they choose to do it? Like what is in for Nasdaq?
jkaptur 2 hours ago [-]
Putting cynicism aside (there's plenty of that here already): there is a theory that people invest in index funds because they don't want to pick individual stocks. They want exposure to "the public stock market as a whole". I think there are good arguments on both sides of including SpaceX in such an index.
Ekaros 3 hours ago [-]
Getting a very popular stock on their exchange. Directly making money from it.
fluoridation 1 hours ago [-]
But on the other hand, it burns trust to change the rules on the fly.
rkuodys 8 minutes ago [-]
I think that is the problem with concentrated markets. You can do whatever and younare actually never "punished" by the market. Ie market htpothesis does not work
lokar 2 hours ago [-]
Yes. This was a deal: add us to the index and we will list on your exchange.
throw1234567891 3 hours ago [-]
The president may throw a tantrum that “some crazy democrat throws stones under the feet of that beautiful Elon, the most beautiful Elon we ever had”. Better do what the new Tzar wants. Dude was sent here apparently by the God, don’t mess with the God.
ar_lan 3 hours ago [-]
I thought Elon and Trump broke up?
throw1234567891 2 hours ago [-]
Have they? Maybe some spacex investor is the “most beautiful we ever had”.
riffraff 2 hours ago [-]
Musk and Trump had a pretty public break up, I think this is one fuckup where we shouldn't blame him.
reaperducer 2 hours ago [-]
You're six months out of date. They're buds again.
throw1234567891 2 hours ago [-]
Maybe Trump has money in it. Who needs friends when you have money. “It’s just business”. No idea, I don’t really follow this soap drama.
What fraction of investors who chose Nasdaq100 over SPY wouldn't have also wanted SpaceX? The whole point is hot and tech-heavy speculation.
inigyou 3 hours ago [-]
Worst, if you're a Nasdaq 100 ETF investor. Best, if you were a SpaceX private investor. All a matter of perspective.
formvoltron 4 hours ago [-]
nah the very worst thing about the spacex ipo is that schwab won't allow me to short it. has nothing to do with the recency of the issue. today i shorted some skhy when i realized it's trading about 30% over the Korean share price (I could be wrong about that)
onlyrealcuzzo 3 hours ago [-]
You can short it elsewhere.
Schwab won't let you, because even if you're 95% right, you'll still probably lose 95% of your money...
It's quite difficult to be 100% right...
WarmWash 3 hours ago [-]
You and your broker have to be pretty damn brazen to iron grip a highly liquid stock all the ways down to -95%.
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
Shorts can go down to -1000% and beyond.
KellyCriterion 2 hours ago [-]
Not true:
Depending on product and regulatory regime, for distinct trader/customer groups there may be distinct rules.
And if you are buying an instrument where you can lose more than you invested, the approach maybe wrong? :-)
gottorf 2 hours ago [-]
> And if you are buying an instrument where you can lose more than you invested, the approach maybe wrong? :-)
This is precisely why shorting can lose more than you "invest", because you're not buying an instrument, you're selling it with the intent (or promise, depending on what kind of instrument it is) to buy it back later, hopefully at a lower price.
There are, as said, depending on juristic regime, products which do not let you lose more than you invested.
On top of this comes national regulation: E.g. in some EU countries, retail traders are exempt from s.c. "margin calls" and the broker is required by regulation to "just close and not ask for more"
Source: Im living in one of these EU countries
formvoltron 1 hours ago [-]
dang all these comments make me want to short more. gimmie your monies!
a company who says we'll have ai in space, meanwhile you can stick ai in the ocean and use ocean water to cool & still have access for upgrade cycles.
meanwhile china and japan and bezos all landing reusable rockets.
meanwhile maybe ai runs locally on phones (today's announcement of deepseek in the iphone in china)
ummmm. short in force!
dheera 3 hours ago [-]
You can synthetic short if you have options level 4
chasd00 3 hours ago [-]
> nah the very worst thing about the spacex ipo is that schwab won't allow me to short it.
there are easier ways to make money than betting against Elon Musk. See Tesla and how well it worked out for short sellers there.
I like SpaceX as a company (especially Starlink) but it's over valued in my opinion. In about a year when there's a little bit of public financial history and the dilution is over i'll probably buy in.
mlinhares 2 hours ago [-]
The illusion isn't over for Tesla, not a chance it will be over for SpaceX in a year.
runarberg 3 hours ago [-]
I for one am glad that you were not allowed to short SpaceX. People gaming the market for their own profits are the worst kind of exploiters and swindlers. You contribute absolutely nothing while siphoning the profits that workers make, lowering the salaries of everyone that actually works for a living.
Note this has nothing to do with my feelings about SpaceX. I am Elon hater nr. 1 and hope SpaceX burns to dust, I only hope speculative investors burn down with it.
EDIT/CLARIFICATION: This post is fundamentally anti-capitalist. You may feel like I am mis-informed or misunderstanding. I am both of theses things if and only if Capitalism truly is self-evident.
z2 3 hours ago [-]
Putting one's money where their mouth is in expressing that a company's stock appears overvalued is very low on my list of "things that exploit the proletariat."
runarberg 1 hours ago [-]
I don’t care the method people use to game the market. They are still participating in a systematic exploitation of workers and deserve the maximum of nothing of what they hope to gain.
My parent wanted to make some unearned money by making speculations and gambles. If they were allowed and if they were successful, they would have made a bunch of money while contributing nothing. Every single dollar they would have made in their speculative gamble would have come from somebody else who actually contributed and but didn’t get the full value from their work.
I am glad that my parent was denied the privileged to participate in this systematic exploitation. The ideal number of speculative investors is zero, and any movement towards that number is an improvement for workers.
positr0n 3 hours ago [-]
How is shorting a stock gaming the market?
You feel a stock is overvalued and you short it. You feel a stock is undervalued and you buy it. What's the difference?
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
The former is likely to lose you money, even if you're right, while the latter is likely to gain you money.
rurp 2 hours ago [-]
What a weird misunderstanding. Shorting reduces fraud in the market, and making it harder to short increases it. There's a reason shady managers had shorts, it increases the chances their bad behavior will be uncovered and punished financially.
3 hours ago [-]
m000 3 hours ago [-]
God forbid an individual makes a profit from shorting. What would be left for hedge funds then? /s
tyre 3 hours ago [-]
I'm not an investor in SpaceX but I don't think shorting stocks at IPO should be allowed. The market should be given time to settle on a price, and it's unlikely that anyone needs to short it on day 1 for hedging. It's purely price speculation.
Yeah, I know why people _want to_ (betting), but it doesn't serve a broader economic purpose.
reactordev 3 hours ago [-]
Going long or going short is your bet on the market. If you can go long, you should be allowed to go short. Restrictions on any trading means you don’t have confidence in the price in which case it shouldn’t be available for trade.
tclancy 3 hours ago [-]
Betting is what everyone who jumped into retail investing and meme stocks does with it, but shorts are a valuable tool in the economy for hedging risk. It also is a good indicator for fraud too.
shermantanktop 3 hours ago [-]
“Broader economic purpose”?
It’s all betting.
If someone wants to dress it up in jargon or talk about beneficial second order effects, they can. But if putting money on an outcome you can’t control isn’t gambling, I don’t know what is.
names_are_hard 14 minutes ago [-]
Is buying insurance gambling? Is giving your second cousin 100k some money so he can open up is restaurant gambling if you expect a percent of the profits but won't actively be involved in advising him on running the business?
KellyCriterion 38 minutes ago [-]
Mh.... is there a difference between "betting" and "gambling" from wording here?
lordnacho 3 hours ago [-]
To settle on a price, you need smart investors to be able to push it either way, which they need shorting and leverage for.
Plus there's option traders who naturally need to go short sometimes.
clickety_clack 3 hours ago [-]
The market “settling on a price” includes the actions of short sellers.
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
Do I need to be able to short bananas for the market to settle on the price of a banana?
notahacker 2 hours ago [-]
If you're confident the price of bananas will fall tomorrow you absolutely can sign a contract to deliver bananas next week at the current price and then buy them when the price drops...
wredcoll 2 hours ago [-]
Yes, you can but does that ability benefit the population/nation/market as a whole?
clickety_clack 1 hours ago [-]
Yes, because the guy buying your bananas is able to make banana-buying decisions for next week based on the price you give him.
You’re not going to make up a silly low number because you actually have to buy the bananas yourself at some point, and you help price discovery because now that guy isn’t buying bananas at a higher price than someone is willing to sell them for.
wredcoll 1 hours ago [-]
Just as a thought experiment, would you say there are any (societal) negatives to the possibility of thr price of bananas (or the share price of spacex) being able to fluctuate wildly based on semi-abstract economic manipulations, like shorts and futures and such.
What I'm getting at is when does it go from investing, "I think this entity is going to take my money and use it to build a profitable factory that will then return to me a share of the profits", to just gambling "I think this stock price will change by the end of the day and I'm going to bet on it", and what are the positives and negatives of that?
notahacker 2 hours ago [-]
Well yes, to the extent the possibility to do that helps stop silly price spikes from a very short term shortage of bananas.
8note 1 hours ago [-]
yes because shorts can also be wrong, and the buyer knows they have a stable price
wredcoll 2 hours ago [-]
I'm not certain you're right, but I think this opinion deserves considerably more (fair) discusson than it's getting.
Lots of replies either personally benefit or just assume the "way things are" is the best, but the stock market has gotten highly abstracted from the original intention of providing capital to grow companies via means other than bank loans.
I get the argument that shorts and friends help make the price the stock is being sold at more accurate, and I believe there's some truth there, but also we constantly see stock prices fluctuate by 10+% in a single day and I have trouble believing the actual value of all these companies changed that much in a single 24 period.
names_are_hard 7 minutes ago [-]
Well the idea that the price of a stock represents the actual value of the company can be complicated but the realization that it's super hard to figure out what the actual value of a company really is, because figuring that out really requires a crystal ball, because you need to know exactly how much money the company will earn in the future, among other things.
None of us have that crystal ball, so market participants try to guess at the future. It's not difficult to believe that those guesses can swing a lot in a single day. Just trying to figure out whether or the Hormuz will be open next week can give you whiplash.
positr0n 3 hours ago [-]
The market will more efficiently settle on a price if market participants can push the price up (buying) and push the price down (shorting).
8note 1 hours ago [-]
the company manipulates itself to look its best possible, taking long term bad decisions in order to juice the value, and wont have more immediate items to juice the share price again for a while
its a reasonable expectation that 3 months after an IPO the price will be lower than it was at IPO
not really a bet so much as that on average the prices at IPO are a local maxima
toomuchtodo 3 hours ago [-]
Why is line go up price discovery acceptable, but line go down price discovery not? If the shares are trading, you should be able to short, it’s arbitrary to disallow it. It is quite literally a part of the market settling on a price.
(under the assumption your broker is managing their risk if your losses from a short position potentially exceeds capital available for liquidation if the trade moves against you)
fastball 3 hours ago [-]
Line go down discovery is acceptable (that is what selling a share is). The reason you might not want options trading very early after an IPO is because the market is frothy enough without the additional layer of complexity.
toomuchtodo 3 hours ago [-]
Certainly, its reasonable for a delay in options being available while market makers prepare to make the market for those options. But shorting? Day 1, the shares are trading and available to borrow to sell to short.
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
Are they actually? How many intermediate steps are involved in finding shares to borrow for a short? I imagine they have to be transferred to some central depository with the feature, for a start, and that takes 2-4 days
toomuchtodo 2 hours ago [-]
Your broker will locate and borrow the shares from an available pool (such as other clients' portfolios), sell them on your behalf, and hold the cash. They don't have to go to the clearinghouse.
somenameforme 2 hours ago [-]
Because lines tend to trend up over time. You're betting on lines going down, and paying rent while doing so as shorting requires you to rent/borrow shares from somebody else. It's an extremely high risk activity that can easily result in an investor losing a very large amount of money.
Elon Musk is politicized so you're going to have people wanting to short against him, for reasons other than it being seen as a rational and sound investment strategy. This is one reason brokers tend to restrict this activity to certain types of investors who are more able to appreciate the risks, to say nothing of baseline necessities like needing a margin account to cover potential losses. Shorting is just very different than buying a stock.
wat10000 2 hours ago [-]
Borrowing and selling are both pretty straightforward financial actions. It seems strange to say you're not allowed to combine the two.
shafyy 3 hours ago [-]
Isn't it all speculation always though? That's why stock picking doesn't work and ETFs are popular.
AtNightWeCode 56 minutes ago [-]
Annoying but not much more. It kinda makes sense too if the index is suppose to reflect the corps. The way SpaceX is set up from a governance point of view is a nightmare though. Also, data centers in space is just stupid. Now it seems like they already abandon it and are going for some kind of AI satellites. Still stupid. I should probably take a hyperloop over to US and ask Elon about it, oh wait, that was also garbage.
root-parent 2 hours ago [-]
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dools 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
There is no evidence that Elon Musk is a Nazi.
GJim 2 hours ago [-]
If it walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then we may have to accept the fact it is a duck.
1 hours ago [-]
root-parent 2 hours ago [-]
A Nazi salute isn’t evidence of Nazism, just as smoke isn’t evidence of fire when you really like the building.
hansmayer 2 hours ago [-]
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2 hours ago [-]
richwater 4 hours ago [-]
The Nasdaq is a shit index to begin with. There are so many other options.
dehrmann 3 hours ago [-]
What you didn't elaborate on is that it's a poor investment thesis, so while the association is Nasdaq == tech, it's not entirely true, and it missing things if what you really want is tech. It also penalizes small floats less than S&P 500, enabling these shenanigans.
tyre 4 hours ago [-]
The NASDAQ is up 27% in the past 1 year. S&P 500 up 21%, DOW +20%.
So, it's doing pretty well!
mattkrause 3 hours ago [-]
If the argument is that it's being manipulated, I'm not sure these stats help.
tyre 3 hours ago [-]
That's fair! I didn't read the comment I was replying to as being about the manipulation but, if so, I agree with their opinion.
hn_go_brrrrr 3 hours ago [-]
I didn't read it about the manipulation either, but neither did I read it as a criticism of the returns.
staticman2 2 hours ago [-]
I'm sure people planning to invest for only 1 year of their lifespan and began their investment journey exactly 1 year ago and who are in the process of selling everything they own today never to invest in stocks ever again will find that Nasdaq one year performance very useful information!
jrflo 3 hours ago [-]
NASDAQ is famously overweighted in tech. It saw an 80% drop in the aftermath of the dotcom bubble, while the S&P500 only had a 40% drop. It's a double edged sword, with the AI boom it's benefiting, if that reverses it will fall proportionally to those gains.
groundzeros2015 3 hours ago [-]
Yes. A strategy with tradeoffs does not make it a “shit index”.
wildzzz 3 hours ago [-]
And a big chunk of that is the AI bubble. How are the rest of the non-AI industries doing?
Interesting, so a shit index is whichever goes down and a good index is whichever goes up?
Does the same rule work in crypto?
tclancy 3 hours ago [-]
Always a FTSE truther.
dheera 3 hours ago [-]
Rule changes like this create market inefficiencies that can be exploited by retail; if everything plays by constant rules, the vast majority of alpha gets concentrated in the institutions.
I love shaking up the firms. Gives normal people a chance to build wealth.
eueie13 3 hours ago [-]
Majority of alpha lol are you on drugs? Do you even know the risk adjusted rate of return most institutions earn…?
Buzz word filled posts like this are the most annoying to read on here
somat 4 hours ago [-]
A stupid/naive question. Why does this affect SpaceX? They have their money(The IPO) Any third party trading value does not change that. Sure there may be individuals, officers of SpaceX who hold these instruments who will be negatively affective, but the company itself?
My best guess, it makes it harder to get loans in the future.
Octoth0rpe 3 hours ago [-]
> My best guess, it makes it harder to get loans in the future.
Which is pretty important! It's my understanding that from all that money they raised during their IPO, a good amount of it went right back out the door again to pay off misc loans for the twitter acquisition. They may only have bought themselves 6 more months of time given their purported burn rate (mostly driven by AI investment), so they're going to need more loans really soon, or another major stock offering.
soleveloper 3 hours ago [-]
> They may only have bought themselves 6 more months of time given their purported burn rate
If they had only ~6 more months they (+auditor) had to issue a warning.
The 6 is not a hard number, AFAIK, but surely a point where it must be reported.
So honestly, I doubt it's the case.
estearum 2 hours ago [-]
At least as written, GP says bought them six more months of time. Not implying they had 0 months to begin with.
Octoth0rpe 2 hours ago [-]
That was indeed my intent. Pre-IPO, SpaceX already had _some_ cash in hand, and was burning >4b per quarter IIRC; so presumably _some_ runway. That said, they also got the anthropic/openai monthly payments coming in soon (already started maybe?). The next earnings release will be the interesting one IMO.
SadErn 2 hours ago [-]
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riazrizvi 2 hours ago [-]
They have a $5bn credit line, and this means the creditor might increase the interest on it.
It's better described as "it increases operational risks to SpaceX". When they face some future difficulty, the odds they can come out of it are lowered. Which is itself a factor that partners consider, including employees, because obviously people prefer to bet their livelihoods on more of a sure thing.
aynyc 3 hours ago [-]
This is about their bond, not that share price. If you are in the US, it's like having low credit score, everything you want to do financially such as leasing or financing a car, buying a house, etc.. will be more costly (higher interest rate) from the lender.
dofm 3 hours ago [-]
Except that it's not clear really that lenders will be able to judge on that basis alone. SpaceX is a different kind of unicorn: it's a government contractor run by the richest man in the world who controls a media echo chamber and gets people elected.
That article compares them to Oracle. Who are, as it goes, pretty similar: run by rich people with a media empire who have their teeth deep in government systems.
These bonds could get worse and worse but if US state and federal governments continue to put thumbs on scales it doesn't matter. The US free market isn't uniformly free.
inigyou 2 hours ago [-]
The bond price is an outcome of lenders judging, not a cause. Lenders have already judged.
dofm 2 hours ago [-]
Of course. But you have a bond buyer who can put their thumb on the scale, and has shown willingness to do so. That buyer also tried to interfere in (succeeded in interfering in) the business of law firms that worked for anti-Trump causes, has directly interfered in the renewable energy market to benefit its backers, etc.
What is to say that SpaceX and Oracle won't get these benefits? (Government buying bonds, trashing ratings agencies, leaning on banks to lend etc.)
Nothing obvious, I posit. So what is the value of a bond when a government is increasingly likely to manipulate the market for it?
And that is putting aside the second order of government interference: foreign governments putting their thumbs on the scale with their own investment funds and influenceable buyers, to buy influence over a government that favours these firms.
hn_throwaway_99 2 hours ago [-]
Nobody doubts all this. What the bond market is saying is that even with all of that, there are plenty of viable scenarios where bond holders aren't paid back.
After all, if you truly believe what you say with conviction, the sensible thing to do would be to buy up as many SpaceX bonds as you can if you think they're so undervalued.
52 minutes ago [-]
dofm 48 minutes ago [-]
[flagged]
DennisP 2 hours ago [-]
Institutional bond traders are pretty sophisticated. They're aware of all the possibilities you mentioned, and pricing the bonds low anyway.
dofm 44 minutes ago [-]
> Institutional bond traders are pretty sophisticated.
I am old enough to remember Long Term Capital Management.
DennisP 32 minutes ago [-]
I'm old enough to remember they weren't just buying and selling corporate bonds like most of the bond market. They were a hedge fund that used massive leverage to exploit tiny arbitrage opportunities between correlated securities.
There may be important factors that the bond market isn't aware of, just like most of them didn't know about the problems with mortgage-backed securities in 2008. But anything you and I are aware of, they probably are too.
ForHackernews 2 hours ago [-]
He's only the "richest" man in the world because of the inflated valuations of his companies. At some point the market looks like a dog chasing its own tail:
Q: Why is this stock so valuable? A: Duh, because Musk is worth a kajillion dollars and everything he touches is gold!
Q: Why is Musk worth a kajillion dollars? A: Because he holds so many shares of extremely valuable companies, silly!
dofm 2 hours ago [-]
There is this, but he is also a quasi-government figure. As Trump weakens he will reappear in that sphere.
lumost 3 hours ago [-]
This is a potentially strong indicator of how institutional investors view spacex. Given that Spacex is in a high depreciation/capital intensive business, a high cost of capital and potentially difficult capital terms is problematic.
Spacex will raise more money again, they have no known path to structural profitability.
mixdup 3 hours ago [-]
This is effectively an increase in interest rates for SpaceX. That's how it affects them
groundzeros2015 3 hours ago [-]
Companies need to raise money for investment. Even Apple doesn’t have cash for all the things they want to do. Suppose they want to lease or buy a piece of real estate.
threetonesun 1 hours ago [-]
Apple has a giant pile of cash and the last time they issued bonds was to do a stock buyback so that might not be the best example, although there's a fairly small number of companies in their unique position.
1 hours ago [-]
clickety_clack 3 hours ago [-]
It makes borrowing money much more expensive going forward.
panphora 3 hours ago [-]
The losses fall on bondholders now, but it does make it harder for SpaceX to raise money going forward. And if they actually slip into junk territory, some institutional investors will be forced to sell (mandates only allow investment-grade), pushing prices down and yields/spreads up even further.
That can snowball: wider spreads → higher borrowing costs → more stress → wider spreads. The existing bonds' coupons are fixed, so the real bite is on future issuance and refinancing.
Lots of capital-intensive companies (SpaceX is definitely in this category) lean heavily on debt markets to fund ongoing investment and roll over maturing debt, so losing cheap access is a big deal.
Isn't it realistically only worth talking about SpaceX stock a few years out? The random walk the stock will do after an IPO seems very uninformative.
danso 4 hours ago [-]
How often do companies issue a $25B bond the same month that they IPO?
ImJamal 3 hours ago [-]
If AI is accurate, bonds are issued in the same month as the IPO 1-2% of the time. Some examples are HawkEye 360 (May 2026), Pinduoduo (2018) and VersaTel Telecom. I didn't double check this so I don't know about the veracity, but it seems like it happens on rare basis.
hightrix 1 hours ago [-]
If I found a random comment on this topic on reddit, didn't read the comment, and then just copy pasted it here, would you feel respected?
This is the same thing. Stop.
dbvn 2 hours ago [-]
So don't regurgitate it without checking. You're putting the onus on the person you're talking with
3 hours ago [-]
sethops1 3 hours ago [-]
Normally I would agree, but SpaceX being forced into the Nasdaq at a 3x multiplier makes this a non-normal situation.
jeremyjh 2 hours ago [-]
This is about a bond issue - a large drop in value there so soon after issue is far more unusual and much worse news.
enopod_ 3 hours ago [-]
This bit is not about the stock, it‘s about bonds. They made about $70B (?) in the IPO and now issued bonds for about $25B. This debt is rated at junk level now.
exabrial 4 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
postalrat 4 hours ago [-]
Why is this only about Elon to some people? It's not only about Elon.
fnordsensei 3 hours ago [-]
I have a friend who unironically said "Elon Musk is the most important human who has ever lived"
qup 3 hours ago [-]
Who's your pick?
nemomarx 2 hours ago [-]
Genghis Khan or Napoleon, maybe? Probably you'd want to pick someone further back but before the modern era you lose details.
Musk has made some tech innovations but he hasn't changed the lives of many generations of people yet. I'd only put him at the level of Edison
fnordsensei 2 hours ago [-]
Whoever came up with the wheel, maybe? Perhaps someone carrying the original homo sapiens mutations?
Auracle 2 hours ago [-]
I’m not who you replied to but that’s honestly an interesting question. Genghis Khan? Jesus, I suppose?
Elon Musk is probably up there, though. You could say people like Henry Ford are on his level, but Elon is certainly more broad in his scope. I think people like them are probably accelerationists, meaning someone else would have done what they’ve done eventually. That could be a long eventually though. It’s hard to compare them to people who shaped history through their actions that nobody else would have done the same way.
fnordsensei 2 hours ago [-]
You'd probably want to be more precise regarding "important for what" as well. And the philosophical angle: if the person hadn't existed, would someone else have slotted in to take their place? Is the impact measured in years/decades, because the overall historical forces were heading in a direction anyway?
Is it like trying to say "the most important bacterium in a petri dish"?
Without diminishing the impact that Musk has had, I'm fairly certain that Musk isn't the answer. And either way, the intent of saying that Musk is the most important person in history I'm fairly certain wasn't a very grounded decision. I'm sure it was more an expression of reverence and fealty.
iririririr 3 hours ago [-]
because the value (or lack of) on most companies he manages are tied to his personality cult. it's the main "product" of those stocks, not always what the company does. see the tsla rewards (hence investments), the board places more resources on musk doing his road show than factories, as proved by hard factual numbers.
3 hours ago [-]
elbasti 1 hours ago [-]
Here's what this means for SpaceX for those of you uninitiated in bond-math:
2. Those bonds are now trading for less than their face value. That means that if you buy one of those bonds on the secondary market, you will get a return (yield) of 7.387% (if the price of a bond goes down, but the coupon stays the same, the yield goes up).
3. This doesn't affect SpaceX directly, but it tells you that if SpaceX were to issue new bonds today, they would have to offer 7.4% coupon on them, not 6.5%. Note that even though that was caused by a 10% drop in the bond value, it's a 13% increase in cost of borrowing!
SpaceX is a cash-flow negative company that depends on debt and selling equity in order to pay the bills. They will have to issue bonds again, and those bonds will be more expensive.
Note that the shortest maturity bonds don't have to be repaid for 5 years, so the impact on cash is not going to manifest for a while...at least 5 years time (assuming they did another bond offering tomorrow). In that sense it's a nothingburger.
The immediate impact it could have is if spacex depends on issuing new, shorter-term debt (lines of credit, etc) whose price could be impacted by the market's perception of their riskiness.
toast0 1 hours ago [-]
> 2. Those bonds are now trading for less than their face value. That means that if you buy one of those bonds on the secondary market, you will get a return (yield) of 7.387%
That's your return if you buy one of those bonds and the bond is paid on schedule. Presumably the market consensus is there's some risk that payment may arrive late or not at all since the yield to maturity has increased since issuance and not as a result of underlying interest rate changes.
el_nahual 51 minutes ago [-]
I mean, that's what the yield is. The spread between what the bond pays and the Risk-Free Rate (Treasury) tells you what the market thinks the risk of default is.
For a spread of 300 basis points that's still a very low probability, probably under 5%.
toast0 47 minutes ago [-]
If they had said 'the yield is' or especially the 'yield to maturity' is... that's one thing, but they said "you will get a return of"
You'll probably get that, but you might not.
wg0 58 minutes ago [-]
Is it the bond or is it the share price that also tanked below IPO level?
Which is all sorts of backwards. Debt has liquidation preference over equity. And equity market say spacex has trillion+ of supposed equity buffer before it cuts into debt value
elbasti 10 minutes ago [-]
This is incorrect. SpaceX has a trillion in Market Capitalization, not a trillion in Equity. These two concepts are no the same. The equity value is the theoretical intrinsic "worth" of a company, and has a very simple definition: Equity = Assets - Liabilities.
Market capitalization takes into account the future value of the business, while equity (an accounting concept) only looks at present day cash & liabilities.
When a company gets liquidated, the future growth/value of the business is, pretty obviously, zero, so the "market cap" is irrelevant. What matters is what is left over once all debts are liquidated.
SpaceX's equity at the time of their IPO was $34 Billion (it's in the S1!). You can also see in their S1 that their cash decreases by about $8B a year, so unless things change they should be underwater in about 4 years.
mixdup 3 hours ago [-]
If the equity market says something that must make it true. Markets have never gotten valuations wrong
Havoc 27 minutes ago [-]
On the other hand the bond markets are pretty reliable too. It's all old school professionals in there not /r/wallstreetbets memekings pumping up their fav stonk
v8xi 2 hours ago [-]
are you not a true believer of the efficient market?
xutopia 3 hours ago [-]
I can't comprehend for the life of me that people put their life savings in what Elon Musk is doing. Are people not seeing how he's lying about the future all the time?
He said he aimed to have 5000 Optimus robots out by end of 2025, 50000 by 2026 and 10 times that in 2027.
He promised in 2015 that full autonomous driving would arrive in 2 years and we aren't there yet 11 years later. He even said in 2016 that there would be coast-to-coast autonomous driving in 2017.
He promised manned missions to Mars by 2024-2025 in multiple interviews between 2011 and 2016.
He promised in 2016 that there would be solar roofs expansions by 2017 that didn't pan out, he promised AGI by 2025 in 2024.
Elon Musk has repeatedly lied about outcomes of his ventures, gotten crazy valuations based on those exaggerations and now people are starting to finally wake up that he isn't as good as his ego.
crimsonspy 3 hours ago [-]
He claimed that he would unearth billions of dollars of government fraud, only to lie about that too. Instead his team cut aid programs and have contributed to an estimated 700,000 deaths so far.
It's crazy to believe that stopping the funding of US backed NGOs directly kills people. Literally just make up bullshit numbers and virtue signal. This is a reason why the US is trillions in debt. We need more than DOGE. We need real cuts to mandatory spending. Otherwise buckle up - they are going to inflate their way out of the debt.
ceejayoz 2 hours ago [-]
> It's crazy to believe that stopping the funding of US backed NGOs directly kills people.
Why? Have US-backed NGOs never saved a single life with their spending?
You can argue it's not worth the spending, perhaps, but you really can't argue that it's not happening somewhere.
> This is a reason why the US is trillions in debt.
This is a tiny, tiny, nearly invisible fraction of that reason.
somenameforme 42 minutes ago [-]
Gotta hit on a few things there in no particular order:
- USAID's final budget was $34 billion. That's already very real money, but it came from the discretionary budget - that giant bill of spending where the government decides what to spend money on: schools, roads, housing, and so on. The entire discretionary budget for 2025 was $1.9 trillion, so USAID made up almost 2% of all the US' federal discretionary spending!
- Nothing USAID was doing was irreplaceable. The vacuum their exit has created is being rapidly filled by a wide mix of other interests. So saying they are saving a life when they are just another replaceable entity, even if a rather large one, is misleading. It's kind of like saying Google is why we have web browsers.
- USAID and the CIA worked hand-in-hand. For instance one project was USAID/CIA starting a fake social media site [1] in Cuba specifically with the goal of trying to create an insurrection, which would undoubtedly be very bloody had they succeeded. So in your calculus you need to account for deaths caused by USAID as well.
- Many of their programs seemed geared towards the creation of dependencies rather than working to ensure the self sustainability of various places. I think this likely ties into the above issue. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for life, give a man a fish a day and you now control that man because he's dependent upon you. Sociopathic intelligence agencies blending with philanthropy is a rather horrific combination.
> so USAID made up almost 2% of all the US' federal discretionary spending!
So, tiny; a fraction of what we spend on much less useful things like the Iran war or huge gifts to ICE.
> The vacuum their exit has created is being rapidly filled by a wide mix of other interests.
Yeah, we don't really want China vacuuming up all of Africa. It was already looking like a growing problem before the USAID cuts.
> So in your calculus you need to account for deaths caused by USAID as well.
I mean, your one example cited didn't work and resulted in zero deaths. If we get to count that sort of thing, we'd have to start accounting for the soft power benefits of USAID (and those the CIA gets from the trade), too. Goodwill, intel, etc.
> Teach a man to fish and you feed him for life, give a man a fish a day and you now control that man because he's dependent upon you.
How does "take their fishing grounds (and other resources) for hundreds of years" figure into the analogy?
ink_13 2 hours ago [-]
If US backed NGOs were distributing life saving medications (e.g. for HIV-AIDS via PEPFAR, to give only one example) and then that distribution was withdrawn, causing recipients to die because they could no longer access medication, what other conclusion should we draw?
zzrrt 2 hours ago [-]
> This is a reason why the US is trillions in debt.
Trump's OBBBA will be another reason, expected to add several trillion in the next few years. So yeah, real cuts are probably needed, but the DOGE people aren't achieving that in net.
wredcoll 1 hours ago [-]
Maybe we should have elected Hillary Clinton then?
(This is a reference to Bill Clinton's extremely successful "Reinventing Government" initiative which actually balanced the federal budget until the next republican came along...)
tejohnso 3 hours ago [-]
Well, rational or not, anybody that put a significant life savings into early TSLA and kept it there is retirement money rich now.
Lots of rational people kept shorting, thinking sanity would prevail, and ended up losing bigly.
rightbyte 3 hours ago [-]
It is hard to estimate how rational the market is.
alex_suzuki 2 hours ago [-]
“the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent”
oooyay 2 hours ago [-]
Salesforce often does product announcements to determine how the market might respond before they ever build anything. The very thing they're selling may not exist and might not even be possible as they describe it.
I think it's a way some businesses just do business and the market has not issued a correction to that. Maybe it should?
DustinBrett 3 hours ago [-]
Every company you mentioned has made more progress in those spaces than anyone else, and they are all clear progress towards the goals discussed.
xutopia 3 hours ago [-]
You're mistaken.
Name 3 accomplishments he made and I'll show you world class work done elsewhere by other companies. The only thing he did which was notable was Starlink and I'll gladly grant you that. China is about to eat Starlink's lunch with their own tech.
Again I think people overestimate Musk's contributions to the world.
laweijfmvo 2 hours ago [-]
1. Starlink, which you provided
2. Made the modern EV relatively commonplace; no other manufacturer was taking it seriously until Tesla succeeded, and took many years to catch up, although they have
3. Re-usable rockets / higher launch cadence leading to significantly cheaper costs to put things in space. No major competition yet.
RealityVoid 2 hours ago [-]
Falcon rockets, starlink, Tesla. They all pushed the envelope in their field. Are the stocks overpriced? Yes. Did they do impressive technical work? Also yes. They might get surpassed by competitors, but that is to be expected for all companies. But they clearly did something special there. And I deff am no Musk fanboy, but you have to give him the credit for establishing those systems.
ge96 2 minutes ago [-]
I think the fact that China is copying SpaceX's tech is a testament to SpaceX's success
wat10000 2 hours ago [-]
Tesla may not have pioneered fundamental technology, but it put together a combination of price and utility that nobody matched at the time. Find me anything in 2018 like a Model 3 that wasn't a compliance car.
Profitably reusable rockets were a major accomplishment. People like to argue against this. Every argument I've seen is either saying it doesn't actually save money or it wasn't new, neither of which is correct. It's very hard to argue with the numbers here; SpaceX is now launching more into orbit than every other launch provider combined.
I think the main reason people downplay these things is precisely because his own claims are so exaggerated. Doing 165 orbital launches in a year just doesn't sound impressive when he promised we'd be sending people to Mars years ago.
panphora 3 hours ago [-]
That simply isn't true. Progress toward a goal isn't the same as leading the field.
Autonomous driving is the clearest counterexample: by March 2026 Waymo had logged over 220 million rider-only miles with nobody in the driver's seat, and was doing 400,000+ rides per week across six US metros. Tesla's consumer product is still officially "Full Self-Driving (Supervised)," and Tesla itself says it does not make the car autonomous. Mercedes has Level 3 certification. Tesla has none.
Optimus missed the stated 5,000 robots in 2025. As of July 2026, Tesla still isn't selling it and is only preparing manufacturing capacity. Meanwhile Agility's Digit is in commercial warehouse deployment today. Solar Roof is worse: Musk targeted 1,000 installations per week, and Wood Mackenzie estimated Tesla averaged about 21 in 2022. Tesla's disputed the number but offered no replacement count.
SpaceX is the real exception. It genuinely leads, and the engineering is remarkable. But it's still a decade overdue on "crewed Mars by 2024." That's the point: on the one venture where "more progress than anyone else" is actually true, the promise is still failing by over a decade.
The criticism isn't that nothing comes to pass. It's that concrete near term promises repeatedly fail and get replaced by bigger ones. When a valuation depends on being uniquely far ahead, competitors catching up erases that premium fast.
lightedman 3 hours ago [-]
"Every company you mentioned has made more progress in those spaces than anyone else"
Lies. Waymo beats Tesla in FSD. Optimus is nothing while China has full fucking martial arts robots. It's 2026 where's that 2025 manned Mars mission? Where's that 2025 AGI promise (currently running itself in circles.) His solar roof tile idea was a bunk plan and any regular roofer could've told you that.
China made a fucking electric car that can KITT jump. The only way Teslas get off the ground is when they hit curbs at batshit insane speeds.
Elon and his companies, outside of SpaceX, are generally frauds. Down to PayPal, which thinks it has a right to YOUR MONEY if you even so much as sneeze wrong (theft by contract.)
gtowey 1 hours ago [-]
His success is like the best case study in the world of how our current economic system is solely for the benefit of a privileged few.
He is obviously a liar, a conman and morally suspect. But he has mastered the art of lying in a way that people want to believe. So much so that he can separate fools from their money to the tune of billions.
When you can do that, every economic institution on the planet wants a piece. It's a firehouse of ill gotten cash, and those supporting his staggering rise to power are there to grab a bit of filthy lucre for themselves. It's a wealth transfer than comes along maybe only a few times in a generation.
Everyone knows he's a complete fraud even as they enable him to pull off all these stunts.
blanched 3 hours ago [-]
From what I can tell, the sad truth is that people think “he’s a billionaire / trillionaire, I want to be involved with that.”
It’s a variant of the people who pick “Jay-Z” in the meme question “would you rather have half a million dollars or lunch with Jay-Z?”
etempleton 3 hours ago [-]
Some people, many people, recognize him as a serial liar/exaggerator, but think he will make them rich too. Eventually that probably stops being true.
lenerdenator 4 hours ago [-]
Good thing there's a strong corporate governance model at SpaceX where the c-suite is fully accountable to an independent board of directors, who could use their majority voting power to remove that c-suite at will.
Could you imagine the abuse of power that could happen if one person held over 50% of the voting power at such a company?
rtkwe 4 hours ago [-]
Are super shares like Zuckerberg's and Musk a new thing? Genuinely curious if they're a recent invention or something that's quietly happened for a while because it seems like a large inversion of the deal of going public, lose some control of the company in exchange for a large amount of cash but these nonvoting/supervoting share splits seem to completely upend what I understood to be part of the deal for access to the stock market.
anamax 4 hours ago [-]
The New York Times Company operates under a dual-class stock structure where the Ochs-Sulzberger family holds roughly 95% of Class B shares. This family control allows them to elect 70% of the company's Board of Directors.
Copied from google's response to "new york times governance"
Google's AI also says that the NYT has had that structure since 1957.
Ford has something similar from the 1930s. (Dodge did too until it was bought.) Raylon (synthetic textiles) did it in the 1920s and the company behind Jack Daniels did it right after Prohibition.
Google says that the NYSE banned dual-class between 1926 and 1986; I don't know how to reconcile that with Ford.
georgeecollins 4 hours ago [-]
Ford has them. What it has meant for Ford-- and will probably mean for Facebook-- is that Zuck's heirs will control the company, for better or for worse.
The common justification for this is that for a media company (NYT) you want a person or family to take responsibility for the editorial content, not a pure profit seeker. Facebook has it both ways and typically denies it has editorial control.
IMO, the flaw of markets is that they are short sighted. Sometimes this allows states to outmaneuver them with a longer view. Current exhibit A: China. Historically state intervention has been worse in the long run. But who knows. If we went into a depression a lot of people may think state intervention is a better system, as many admired the USSR during the Great Depression.
orionsbelt 4 hours ago [-]
Zuckerberg’s high vote shares convert to regular shares after he leaves or dies. His heirs will not continue to have super votes.
4 hours ago [-]
kmeisthax 2 hours ago [-]
The USSR's main problem was not that it was socialist or communist, but that it was Russian. Russia is run by people who are adept at coopting revolutionary movements into a corrupt, authoritarian core. When left-wing libertarians say "true Socialism has never been tried", this is (along with China) what they are referring to.
The theoretical arguments against socialism (or, more specifically, centrally planned state production) given by Hayek is that pricing is information and markets are computers on that information, ergo changing the information gives you a bad result. This certainly applied to the kinds of production the Soviet Union loved to engage in, but there's no particular reason why it can't apply to capitalist enterprise as well. I mean, Facebook's headcount or market cap alone is larger than some actual nation-states' population or GDP.
Just like how the USSR was nominally socialist but practically engaged in exactly the same state-controlled mode of production as feudalism, today's corporate entities are nominally capitalist but practically feudalist. The medieval historians in the room would probably balk at me using the word "feudalist" to describe either, so to be clear, what I mean is "an economic system in which the majority of profit goes to landowners / platform owners / the state / etc". In this economic mode, companies can warp markets to their whims in exactly the same way Congress can.
Except, Congress is democratically controlled. Joint-stock corporations are inherently oligarchial in structure: control of the company is assigned based on how many shares you can afford to buy, so the company answers to the amount of money that has capitalized it, and not any other concern[0]. The "innovation" in Facebook's IPO was to go from internal oligarchy to internal autocracy - to install Mark Zuckerberg as God-Emperor of Facebook and largely depose the shareholder class that normally runs publicly-traded entities.
You'd think markets would have priced in this risk, but Facebook IPO'd at the peak of its hype and was able to get away with this. The funny thing about Hayek's distributed market computer is that it does not actually reach perfectly efficient price computation. If it did, you could crack RSA keys by placing a sufficient number of suitably complex options trades. Markets can put a bounty on fixing incorrect pricing information, but they can also just refuse to accept corrected pricing. Everyone rushing into Facebook stock counteracted the few people concerned about the ridiculously autocratic governance structure. And now that it's obvious that such a thing was a problem, it's too late to challenge it, because now Facebook has platform holder money. Zuckerberg can bribe the shareholders to not care about their lack of control.
The history of state intervention is very fraught, but there's one subset of interventions that has a better track record than most: those intended to stymie autocrats of trade. The state cannot correctly set prices better than a market can, but it absolutely can prevent other state-like entities from doing the same thing. Likewise, it would behoove the world's competition law and securities regulators to investigate and regulate the use of dual-class shares to retain control over companies you do not own.
Unfortunately, the current administration is unlikely to do anything about this.
Actually, to make matters worse, Texas is deliberately trying to pour gasoline on the problem by disenfranchising minority shareholders. I believe this was done specifically to give Elon Musk even more control over SpaceX, because Delaware made the mistake of actually entertaining a shareholder lawsuit over Musk's pay packet. If Facebook was an autocracy that bribed its shareholders into compliance, then SpaceX is an autocracy that says, "Fuck you, pay me". If there's one thing that gives me hope, it's that the markets are rightfully rejecting this obvious attempt at offloading Musk's toxic junk onto retail. But this is mainly because Elon failed to generate suitable hype to get the market to buy into his trash, not because markets are actually good at pricing in this specific kind of risk.
[0] In fact, this is part of why you see companies go to great lengths to fight unions, even when negotiating with a union would be cheaper. The shareholder class considers democratic control (one worker, one vote) to be an existential threat.
saalweachter 2 hours ago [-]
They were a thing in the previous 20's and the exchanges banned them in like the 40's (you could still have a dual-class corporate structure, you just wouldn't be listed on eg the NYSE), because investors thought that was some bullshit to have someone control a company while owning only a tiny slice of it.
That rule was dropped sometime in the 80s.
rhplus 4 hours ago [-]
Some media companies had them before the 1980s. New York Times issued dual class in 1969 so that the owning family maintained editorial control.
Berkshire Hathaway is possibly the most famous from the 80s/90s. The class A shares are significantly more expensive and proportionately even more powerful than the class B shares. The lower price version was important back when physical exchanges didn’t support fractional shares as they do today.
wbl 3 hours ago [-]
Berkshires share classes are different in that A is exactly ten B shares and anyone can convert A to B and hold them. The dual share classes that are bad separate control from ownership.
rtkwe 6 minutes ago [-]
The BRK A and B are slightly different in that A is worth 1500 B but B only has 1/10000 of a vote so it IS a somewhat lopsided value vs voting share but not as bad as the 0 vote SPCX shares that just got dumped on the market.
> Kreuger's financial empire has been described by one biographer as a Ponzi scheme... Another biographer called Kreuger a "genius and swindler", and John Kenneth Galbraith wrote that he was the "Leonardo of larcenists".
skybrian 4 hours ago [-]
No. Google has them too.
Arainach 4 hours ago [-]
That's absolutely still "recent" when discussing corporate governance.
rtkwe 4 hours ago [-]
Google is also pretty new in the terms I was talking about only slightly older than Facebook. I mean going back to the 80s/90s or earlier, pre current FAANG at least.
3 hours ago [-]
dweekly 3 hours ago [-]
Interestingly enough, strong corporate governance and independent directors do not produce better returns. This is a central point in Eric Rees's book Incorruptible.
guys a successful founder who lucked out and now has an academic hobby. I'd read other people if i were you.
dweekly 3 hours ago [-]
1. He cites existing academic literature that is peer reviewed such as the link I provided.
2. If his claims are incorrect and poorly sourced, feel free to call them out. But his research appears to have been rather exhaustive on this topic.
3. If there are other sources that contradict these claims and are well researched, links are welcome
cryptoegorophy 4 hours ago [-]
Is it abuse of power or company success? Wouldn’t shareholders vote out any crazy successful ideas Elon had? Likely bankrupting companies at their early stages?
wildzzz 3 hours ago [-]
That's why companies usually don't have a bunch of competing owners from the start. You do your big risky moves early on when you have the novel vision and a big blank check from a VC. Public stockholders aren't going to be as risk tolerant because the ROI is never going to be as high as what the early VC would get. Going public is growing up, you can't do the fun risky stuff you did when you were a young startup with more cash than sense. When you do want to do something fun as a public company, you have to do it carefully because you're dealing with other people's money now.
tclancy 3 hours ago [-]
No one ever votes out the guy running the ring toss at the carnival either. What if your man only plays rigged games so he can resist anyone looking at the books or having a voice?
dgritsko 4 hours ago [-]
You dropped your "/s".
artemonster 2 hours ago [-]
This is not reddit, people actually read and understand sarcasm (most of the time)
fluoridation 1 hours ago [-]
Poe's law means you should still give some indication that you're making a joke.
khurs 3 hours ago [-]
The financial press failed to run headlines damning the SpaceX IPO, or all the ongoing false promises Elon makes.
And now they report that investors, many of whom are their customers, are suffering...
antitoi 2 hours ago [-]
Between Matt Levine and the FT, I saw plenty of damning (or at least skeptical) coverage throughout the entire lead-up.
disgruntledphd2 2 hours ago [-]
This particular author/publication has been beating this drum about Elon and his many companies for years now, fwiw.
shevy-java 2 hours ago [-]
Anyone still buying anything the right-arm-raising guy is controlling is out of his or her mind.
4 hours ago [-]
asim 4 hours ago [-]
Quite honestly IPOs and the stock market in general is a Ponzi scheme. This is something I would never have said before. I am not a skeptic. I invested in the markets for years and made money on Amazon, Google, twilio, and so many others. But I also lost a lot of money buying near or after the IPO. The game is rigged. Those who put money in post IPO in the 12 months after are left holding the bag for years. It takes 10+ years to recover that. The people who invested pre IPO, the VCs, the bankers, etc. they are getting a good deal. In the case of VCs they are taking early risk. Not at the late stage. But earlier. In many cases it's been a long hold. Again 10+ years. But anyone coming in at the IPO you are buying at a peak when someone decided that's the perfect time to hype it. We're all catching a falling knife. Doesn't matter if the business fundamentals are sound. They become disconnected from realities of the market when it all gets tulip crazy.
These things have a way of working themselves out. But look at almost all IPOs and the next 12 months the stock is down 50+% so I'd rather wait. And honestly when I buy, it's to hold 10+ years, not make a quick buck and it's because I believe in the value. You can believe in SpaceX but also still believe the market and the dynamics of IPOs is almost criminal for retail investors.
It's almost as bad as crypto token sales tbh.
Maxatar 4 hours ago [-]
This isn't backed by any evidence though. Jay Ritter maintains an extensive amount of data on IPOs here:
And his data shows that IPOs for the most part perform about as well as their respective market. That is large multi-billion dollar IPOs perform about as well as the broad market, and smaller IPOs (which constitute the vast majority of IPOs) perform about as well as other small-cap companies.
In other words, investing in IPOs doesn't give much of an advantage or disadvantage compared to investing in other similarly sized companies.
What's true is that most stocks, including IPOs, don't do well in the long run. The half-life of a publicly traded company is something like 10 years.
MikhailTal 4 hours ago [-]
Also, the OP just does not understand how the market works anyway. Surely if it was obvious that investing in fresh IPOs is a bad move, all of the big boys (banks, hedge funds etc) would short them to the point of equalising anyway. Maybe not to the absolute efficient point, but still, why do people think they can see such a huge obvious trend, and also assume that other people cannot see it?
SpicyLemonZest 17 minutes ago [-]
Banks generally cannot make these kind of directional bets, and the Gamestop saga has shown that it's very risky for short interest to get too high against retail excitement. So if an IPO is heavily overvalued, the level of pressure required to bring it down immediately may not materialize for structural reasons. I made a modest amount of money from SPCX falling, and I'm sure some hedge funds made much more than me, but I and I expect they would have stayed far away if short interest had been higher.
aftbit 4 hours ago [-]
>Doesn't matter if the business fundamentals are sound.
The business fundamentals are rarely sound for modern IPOs, especially anything Elon adjacent. His companies are just as bad as crypto token sales in terms of their hype. Heck, some of the stock price appreciation of Tesla _was_ driven by their ownership of crypto for a year or two.
an0malous 4 hours ago [-]
Stocks, especially without dividends and negligible voting rights, are basically baseball cards for companies.
Ekaros 2 hours ago [-]
That is funny comparison looking how baseball card markets have gone recently. Which is extreme increases in prices for little logical reasons. Or has baseball massively increased in popularity? (Honest question)
an0malous 2 hours ago [-]
I would guess it’s the same force driving absurd stock valuations — the money supply doubled around COVID and all the new money has to pool up somewhere. Some of it ends up in stocks and real estate, but once those become obviously overvalued it starts pooling up in more fringe investments like trading cards. It’s the same dynamic that created exotic mortgage backed securities that led to the 2008 financial crisis. There’s literally trillions of dollars of capital that’s slowly losing value from inflation and the owners of that capital are desperate to find investments that will preserve or increase their wealth.
Ekaros 2 hours ago [-]
And on lower end for many it feels that they are out of options. So flipping or speculating on anything they can get their hands on is only way to make it in life now. Pokemon cards is biggest example of this. People camping and literally fighting over in essence scraps for very small amount of product to then just resell it to someone else. Who probably speculate on it themselves or need for it to run some type of other scheme like gambling...
It really is weird market from outside. Like millions of cards waiting to be encapsulated in plastic with tiny label on them naming a number. Depending on number the value can go up multiple times. Each of these paid at least something like 20 dollars...
spking 4 hours ago [-]
Warren Buffett famously said IPO stands for “It’s Probably Overpriced”.
mikestew 4 hours ago [-]
It’s been true for over twenty years that the majority of IPOs drop below their IPO price and stay there. Maybe your brokerage has some shares before IPO day that they’ll let you buy, but you’re still taking a big risk. Buy shares on the open market? Yeah, you’re the sucker they were looking for.
martythemaniak 4 hours ago [-]
There's been a massive change to public markets in the last decade and the retail path to making money seems to have closed. I made a some money on IPOs using a laughably simple heuristic:
"Is the company market cap low? Do they have a decent product? Is it plausible they'll 10x? Yes -> Buy some amount I can afford loosing"
For example, Tesla IPO'd at $5B cap, it was perfectly plausible to believe they'd be worth $50B some day. Shopify IPO'd at $1.3B, Square at $3B, 10x was perfectly believable. Uber IPO'd at $75B, I did not believe they'd be worth $750B any time soon, or ever. Do I believe SpaceX will be worth 20T in like 10 years? Lol. Fmao even.
Today's IPOs at $1T+ means that private money figured this out and cut the retail public out, IPOs seems to be a really terrible deal these days.
semiquaver 4 hours ago [-]
What you’re saying is entirely vibes-based. The actual data utterly contradicts your claim (see sibling).
tclancy 3 hours ago [-]
I don't think so. It's strident and it may be eliding some details, but the idea is IPO shares are available to institutional investors first and that adds a tax for retail investors that is probably not worth paying. A suspicious mind might go so far as thinking the institutional investors don't necessarily care about the underlying metrics at IPO up to a certain number of shares: they know that whatever X opens at, they can get 1.25X for the shares immediately after.
4 hours ago [-]
5 hours ago [-]
swader999 4 hours ago [-]
I'm impressed with the general public. I thought these guys would get away with their hype train. Nice surprise.
maest 4 hours ago [-]
A much larger percentage of bond traders are institutional, compared to equities, where retail is very active in some names.
So I wouldn't really give too many points to "the general public" for this one.
baggachipz 4 hours ago [-]
Don't worry, they made plenty with the pump-and-dump.
tjwebbnorfolk 3 hours ago [-]
but they did. they already got their money. it's the investors who are going to take a bath, not spacex
mixdup 3 hours ago [-]
The next time SpaceX wants to sell some bonds they will take a bath. Even if this isn't immediately screwing Elon or SpaceX, it indicates a much higher interest rate next time they issue bonds
solumunus 4 hours ago [-]
The thing that propelled Tesla to ridiculous heights was the massive shorting (and eventual covering). This should just drop and drop (I hope).
DuckConference 4 hours ago [-]
> has now widened from the initial +175bps to a whopping +231bps doing more than two-thirds of the work.
2.31% spread over treasuries is heading for junk bond status?
beaviskhan 3 hours ago [-]
It's a lot closer to junk (approx 2.7%) than it is to investment grade (approx 0.8%):
No, but the fact that they're the worst-performing BBB bonds, the company is burning cash, and the equity being down 38% since its peak after 1 month of trading is indicative of the market's…suspicions.
We'll see what ratings agencies think of the health of the company.
kQq9oHeAz6wLLS 4 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
lmohseni 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
marcusverus 3 hours ago [-]
If these figure represent actual deaths (big if), those people will have died because literally nobody on earth was willing to pay to keep them alive--yourself included.
macintux 3 hours ago [-]
If a pillar is removed from a building with no warning, no one would claim that its collapse was from the unwillingness of anyone else to put a new one in place.
If DOGE had announced a 2-year phaseout of humanitarian aid, governments and NGOs might have had time to fill the gap. Doing so arbitrarily and abruptly was simply cruel.
rightbyte 3 hours ago [-]
A gigantic rug pull of bread and medicine is really not where we should blame the poor.
evantbyrne 2 hours ago [-]
Not everyone is looking to save a buck at anyone's expense. Don't ever make the mistake of thinking we're the same.
3 hours ago [-]
lmohseni 3 hours ago [-]
But wait, I do pay taxes? By you logic, no policy choice can ever cause harm because the responsibility is always redistributable to several billion bystanders. Pretty convenient!
CurbStomper 2 hours ago [-]
[dead]
tcp_handshaker 4 hours ago [-]
If only these people have been warned before....
</pretend_care>
earth-tattoo 2 hours ago [-]
Can we have a separate anti-Trump, Elon, etc. section on hacker news? So I can separate this noise from the real news. I'm no pro Elon, but this stock went from 150 to 200, and there was no news on HN. Now it dipped from 150 to 136 and suddenly it's on HN front page. The headline should be: "Traders trading".
charcircuit 2 hours ago [-]
10% drop 1 month after IPO is normal for a stock. It doesn't mean it's heading for junk bond status.
me_again 1 hours ago [-]
Stocks and bonds are different things, and the bond issue is separate from the IPO. Both are ways for companies to raise money, SpaceX did both. This thread's nominally about the bond, but for some reason everyone's talking about the stock.
eigenspace 2 hours ago [-]
Bonds are not the same thing as stocks.
trolleski 4 hours ago [-]
Musk biggest mistake is that he wanted to start another bubble while the last bubble didn't pop yet. This is against the handbook of a Wall Street thief, bad, bad Elon.
chmorgan_ 3 hours ago [-]
Is this a real concern? SpaceX is doing amazing in terms of business.
aftbit 2 hours ago [-]
SpaceX-the-space-launch-business is doing amazing things, which is part of what makes it so sad that the financials and buzz is all for SpaceX-the-enterprise-AI-business.
Their S-1 projects $28 trillion TAM, with 93% of that attributed to AI, ~6% to connectivity via Starlink, and only ~1% for space launch capability.
Of their $20 billion CapEx spent in 2025, 60% was spent towards AI data-centers, 20% was spent towards Starlink satellites, and ~20% was spent towards actually building Starship and Falcon 9. That's gone up to nearly 80% towards AI in Q1 2026.
Of course, "AI" makes up only ~20% of their current revenues.
So... this company is priced as an AI startup but it's actually a satellite internet and space launch business.... or is it? Shame to see the coolest thing that Elon did be eaten by the AI monster.
It depends on if you mean the space part or the nascent AI mega company SpaceX is pretending to be. The ipo claimed the space launches would only be a small part of their future profits and business and that they'd reach a 7 trillion dollar TAM or etc - this isn't a good sign for that promise.
bawolff 2 hours ago [-]
if people aren't buying the bonds, then people do not believe that they are doing amazing.
cyberjerkXX 3 hours ago [-]
Keep an eye on Rocket Lab. Peter Beck is legit.
preetham_rangu 5 hours ago [-]
Cheap capital masked a lot of risk. The current rate environment is exposing it.
rsynnott 5 hours ago [-]
These are bonds that were issued a few weeks ago.
amanaplanacanal 4 hours ago [-]
My take is that the resumption of that war in Iran makes it more likely that interest rates will rise, and rising rates means falling bonds prices.
notahacker 4 hours ago [-]
yeah, as the article said bond prices have fallen slightly over the time period but this is much more bond buyers seeing increased risk SpaceX isn't going to have the cashflow or ease of further equity raises to pay them back in the long run. (With it being bonds the upside of "but what if SpaceX actually does become bigger than the present US economy" is capped too)
londons_explore 4 hours ago [-]
I don't see a future in which those bondholders don't get paid back.
The company has plenty of revenue, and if needed can just turn off the r&d tap and become a boring company. Terrible for the shareholders obviously, but the bond holders will be fine.
notahacker 4 hours ago [-]
This assumes that SpaceX's decision maker decides to prioritise cuts to repay bondholders over R&D to see if they can innovate their way to bigger profits, which doesn't seem a sure bet (tbh I'd put SpaceX under its current management very low on the list of companies likely to do this)
I mean the bond yield is 6.65% over US Treasury returns of 4.75% so it's not like everyone's running in fear of their imminent collapse either. But they're less confident than they were when Elon company valuations looked immune to gravity.
33hgtt 3 hours ago [-]
Another example of complete idiocy on this board.
Yep spacex can afford to have a declining value of equity… its talent who are mostly paid with stock will leave for its competitors - increasing the probability of bankruptcy. Putting the company in a tail spin heading for default.
So how are the bond holders gonna get paid in the event that happens? Oh in bankruptcy court? Lmao.
Raising equity is not a loophole either - ebit and ebitda drive measures of default risk.
Most of you on here should never ever talk about finance. It’s like you learned how to discount a cash flow and have it all figured out lololol
swingandamiss 3 hours ago [-]
It's wild to watch HN root for Tesla, spacex, starlink, etc to fail just because they don't like Musk. If HN gets their way, we'll regress back to the stone age with all their "anti" views on tech these days (even anti datacenters). I guess it's good that the influence of the HN crowd doesn't flow into China/Asia where they are aggressively mimicking Musks vision. At least Asia will have a future.
toddmorey 3 hours ago [-]
I'm very pro tech. Because I'm pro tech, I honestly wish there were more ethical companies in the space. It can be hard to find US tech companies to cheer for. My main business-related challenge with Elon is his public predictions are so wildly ungrounded. Skepticism is absolutely warranted.
Two things:
- You can cheer for his companies and technologies but against these financial maneuverings because they risk genuine harm & setback to the industry
- I stopped asking for people to put politics aside in support of these companies when I realized Elon couldn't put politics aside to support these companies.
lgl 2 hours ago [-]
> even anti datacenters
Now, I'm a computer guy, love tech and have nothing against datacenters. But the recent anti-datacenter sentiment is not some luddite reaction. Data-centers cause serious social changes in property prices, electricity costs, water waste etc. Sure, there is a need for more datacenters and more compute, but lets not diminish the very real worries by the people or communities affected.
And contrary to what many of these hyper-scalers and the senators/politicians they lobby want to make you believe, datacenters do not bring in enough jobs to make it worth it for many of these communities.
Once a datacenter is built, minimum staff is required. And this is now very obvious since many of these companies are now also preaching for datacenters in space.
vel0city 2 hours ago [-]
I think the biggest change in public sentiment in datacenters is a reaction to the extreme scale they're being deployed at these days. They're really vastly unlike datacenters of the past. The power densities are so much higher, they're so much larger, and they're getting vastly more environmental waivers and tax subsidies than ever before.
A quiet, average-sized warehouse-like building in an industrial area with a big power substation next to it often didn't bother a lot of people. A giant monster of a building being built in what was previously people's backyards with howling on-site power generation that got installed without any kind of air quality reviews because they're allegedly "temporary" and starts sucking the groudwater dry is a whole different story.
It certainly is a contrast from the Tesla years. But overall I think the current consensus is:
- we don’t believe in startups (low quality scams)
- we don’t believe in technology. (It’s surveillance and distraction).
- we don’t believe in markets (regulate the RAM)
- we don’t believe in agency (unruly rule breakers)
And honestly we’ve seen a lot of events that strengthen those positions. Some of it is age as well. I’m just interested to see what comes next with so little faith in the industry.
baggy_trough 2 hours ago [-]
I can't identify one item on that list that I think would be fair to consider a consensus.
groundzeros2015 1 hours ago [-]
Really? Do you want to try one out?
I don’t see very many articles interested in new startups. It’s usually about them failing. I often use market explanations in my comments and these are not received favorably.
nova22033 3 hours ago [-]
Is it anti-Musk to point out Musk makes wild promises that rarely come true...robotaxis at scale, xAI creating MacroHard etc etc.
mjg2 2 hours ago [-]
I don't understand why people cast skepticism or not-devotion as "hatred." There's a whole spectrum for opinions to fall on; I don't care for sports but that doesn't mean I hate baseball.
breezybottom 3 hours ago [-]
I'm pretty sure the founding of SpaceX doesn't mark the end of the stone age.
MrDrone 3 hours ago [-]
I don't just dislike Elon Musk like he's some jerk I don't agree with. This isn't a baseball game where he's the other team's star pitcher and we should put aside our differences when the game is over.
Elon actively interfered with US elections, and has done untold damage through his DOGE stunt. He uses his vast wealth in ways that have done real damage to the US, the US economy and in support of people who are dismantling American rights.
The boogeyman of "China/Asia" won't make me "support" a man who uses his money to make America worse. I do not support his actions and I do no wish to fund them regardless of the technology they create.
bpodgursky 3 hours ago [-]
They are mostly jealous Europeans.
MaxHoppersGhost 3 hours ago [-]
This is the explanation for most anti-US industrial power comments on here. The rest are chinese bots or people who have overdosed on biased news (which is not a phenomenon exclusive to one side or another).
dheera 3 hours ago [-]
I don't actually hate Musk. Although he has done bad, I think he has done far more good than bad. He has, for one, directly improved my quality of life on the transportation front.
mempko 2 hours ago [-]
The guy's vision is a world where children don't get the medicine they need and fascism rules (he gave a nazi salute, unironically). DOGE has killed people. Has killed children.
iamshs 3 hours ago [-]
Guy was doing Nazi salutes at Trump's inauguration. If he wanted support from normal people, he should have remained within normal political norms, not do Nazi salutes. I don't think it is normal to expect sympathy after that, people will be revolted and would want him to fail. They should not be judged for this opinion, it's pretty vanilla. Normal people still carry conscience, an innate justice system. Otherwise we won't even have justice system if we start giving people an out based on fame, talent etc.
rightbyte 3 hours ago [-]
If anything people are severly downplaying him being an unstable alt-nazi edgelord or whatever he self identifies as. As his fan club gets smaller it gets more fanatic, too. A lot of Twitter AI on Mars fan fic.
qwerpy 2 hours ago [-]
The fact that people like you are still pushing the subjective salute thing as incontrovertible fact makes it hard to find any common ground. Serious people in the media, even the ones heavily biased against Elon, don’t harp on it the way online people do.
GuinansEyebrows 59 minutes ago [-]
i do not want to find common ground with people who do nazi salutes or those who excuse them. i want consequences these people because they wish harm upon me or excuse those who wish harm upon me. there is no "center" with this subject; there never has been, because nazi behavior forces the binary.
rightbyte 2 hours ago [-]
Subjective? This is gas lighting. He put on his angry face, lips together and all. It was no subjective or ironic John Cleese nazi salute. It was a nazi salute. Then he went on to starve kids on medecine to death. I mean. Like. Really? Is this still in dispute?
2 hours ago [-]
_diyar 47 minutes ago [-]
The drop in price is a bad metric to judge this by since bond prices depend on the yield of other items.
Here's the key point in the article: A month ago, the bond was priced at +175bps yield above treasuries with similar maturity, now it's priced at +231bps.
https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/nasdaq-che...
The normal seasoning period is there for a reason. There is a massive downside to premature inclusion of a stock that is initially overvalued and then settles to a reasonable/sustainable value.
Edit: thanks for the downvotes. Defenders of capitalism unite!!! lol. Free market right?
You could make a decent argument that capitalism will very likely end-game devolve into crony-capitalism as it's typical failure mode, but I don't think it's written in stone.
It's funny to me. Everyone rails about Atlas Shrugged being some libertarian fantasy story. I always read it as an allegory warning about crony capitalism and how it ruins society along with a story about trains and magical perpetual motion machines.
Remember kids: socialism is judged by how it failed in real life, capitalism is judged by how perfect it is in theory
Try actually defining capitalism in a way that doesn't apply to basically any random society since the dawn of agriculture.
Stuff like people buying and selling items using a currency for a price the individual chooses has been common to basically every human society we have written records for.
The formalization of the process of buying shares in a company and receiving dividends/profits as a result is a bit newer, but the general concept of "I give you money, you use it to make something and sell it then give me money back" has been around for roughly the same amount of time as currency itself.
Anyways, my point is that there is a lot of things to criticize about our current world/economy, using the term "capitalism" while doing so is too vague to be useful in any way.
(Communism/socialism does have more of an actual definition, but very few people are aware of or use it, so it doesn't help all that much).
Full laissez-faire, free market capitalism generally leads to wealth (and power) imbalance. Regulation is necessary to prevent that (assuming you want to maintain a "fair" democracy of sorts and not regress to oligarchy).
That's a market economy, which may or may not be capitalist. Markets have existed for thousands of years under various economic systems.
Agree on your other points though, 'capitalism' was coined to just describe and criticize the system they saw emerging, one of private ownership of the means of production, combined with wage workers who do not own their tools or the product of their labor, but instead sell their time.
But its hard to have discussions around because too many people conflate "market economy" == "capitalism" but you can have markets in a feudalist, socialist, communist, any other society, that doesn't inherently make them capitalist. But I still think its useful as a term, but only to specifically describe who owns the capital.
.. feudalism?
Which, AFAIK, lasted much longer, and is just not the same thing?
> Feudalism is a term often used to describe the social, economic and political conditions that existed in Western Europe during the Middle Ages. At its core, it was a system in which a landowner, or lord, granted a piece of land called a fief to a subordinate known as a vassal. In return, the vassal pledged loyalty to the lord, providing labor, military service, payments—or a mix of these.
And then the next paragraph goes on to say that historians think this is way too simple to describe what real people were actually doing.
Either way, unless every single piece of property in the kingdom (including, like, plows and mill stones and spinning wheels) was granted by the king (or someone he had granted to) it seems like there's still a lot of room for buying/selling/investing.
I mean, it's an interesting answer but my basic point is that the "real world" is far too complex for a term like capitalism to be at all useful.
Even stuff like "free market", can a market be "free" if a government exists? What about monopolies? Etc etc.
I just want people to be more specific when they criticize systems!
It completely ignores the decades of external hostility toward any nation that attempted to build a socialist economy. Almost every attempt has been met with near immediate intervention from captialist super powers, particularly the USA. Nixon activeley worked to cause the military coup in Chile, Cuba has faced the longest trade embargo in modern history (and yet still managed to outperform its peers in the region in healthcare and literacy). Its unscientific to attribute these struggles purely to internal failure when they are subject to deliberate economic warfare.
Secondly, your definitions are being stretched to fit your thesis. Scandinavia is not "socialist flavored" it IS a social democracy, with free markets. Claiming China's success is from captialism is ignoring that its economy relies entirely on state owned land, state owned and controlled banks, and state owned companies, and mandatory five year plans coming from the state.
If we classify any successful state-led initiative as "capitalist" and any blockaded, intervened upon state as "purely socialist" then the argument is an unfalsifiable truism.
American libertarians often imagine some kind of wonderland capitalism where everyone agrees to play by the rules that aren't enforced by anyone. To my knowledge this has never existed as a long-term equilibrium and it can't exist. I've yet to meet anyone who can tell me how their imaginary ideas go up against claims like
1. Encouraging infinite growth with no controls or limits will always lead to monopolism and is a one-way ratchet
2. Power vacuums are always filled (no public government leads to private companies stepping in and taking the dictatorial role, this time without any of the democracy)
3. Power always corrupts
1. Capitalism where there is no government or regulatory interference, and the "invisible hand of the free market" produces some kind of utopian society based purely on every business abiding by rules enforced by no one, where somehow corporations don't take advantage of workers they way they do now despite there being no laws against it.
2. The same thing but sarcastically because it's obvious that that system would be demonstrably worse than the restricted version of capitalism that we have now.
Historical examples:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Oil
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoebus_cartel
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DRAM_price_fixing_scandal
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-Tech_Employee_Antitrust_L...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPEC
Obviously this all falls apart when capitalism can buy legislation. We are seeing how the USA is currently eroded by a few oligarchs.
Society needs somethings to try to stop corruption wehther government rules or non government actions.
Under pure capitalism what stops this?
“True communism has never been tried”
Adam Smith, the Wealth of Nations
See QQNE and SPNE.
The real question is why are employers able to limit employee 401k investment choices and employee health insurance. This is not freedom.
It does not mean it is state-owned.
They did lower the free float rule
The very fact that they were asking the question is such a huge red flag.
Bought an air mattress recently. Way better than a sleeping bag on the ground, even though I can also manage that.
But we are thread is about corruption (probably with bribes, and stealing the money of people that didn't participate on the transaction), while everybody keeps pretending is a consensual sale.
dont believe me, look up how much a open loop DIY system costs.
Index and other funds are forced to buy as their contractual mandate is to follow the index or methodology set out by the fund.
And beyond that there is a lot of capital in active funds that use an index as their benchmark. So they don’t have to buy anything, but they are trying to beat their benchmark so not buying is an active decision with risk.
https://www.justetf.com/uk/search.html?search=ETFS&assetClas...
These are all products that people and funds can choose to buy or not buy.
If I'm already invested, and they change the rules on me in a way I don't like, I have to sell, and that's a taxable event.
So if I have invested in a Nasdaq index, and I don't want a massive exposure to SpaceX prematurely, I am forced to close my position and immediately pay taxes on the profits. I pay the taxes, and now my investing capital is reduced because Elon wanted to force index funds to buy SpaceX stock, which indirectly forces all current owners to buy SpaceX.
It's not future buyers so much as people that are already exposed, and were probably not counting on getting rug pulled by the Nasdaq.
So no, you are correct that no one new to investing is forced to own SpaceX stock, but millions of existing fund holders are now exposed to a stock in a way that simply wasn't possible when they put their money in, and will be penalized if they don't want that.
There's a cost to selling, the brokerage fee plus in many countries there's then taxes due on any profits. Many people would prefer to have unrealized gains where they can pay the tax years ahead, when they need the money.
(Also please don't make the same comment 4+ times.)
I don't think that the claim of "the Nasdaq is misusing their institutional trust" is a controversial claim. Moreover, one of the things that people choose when they (401k, pension funds, passive investors) is institutional mechanisms that prevent potentially mispriced items from entering their portfolios.
Its also a matter of principle. They had a seasoning period to allow for market price discovery over time, and they created a process to waive it for one company. Its not unreasonable to say that that is a bad thing.
So whether the index funds do or don't buy a certain stock has direct implications for real, non-millionaire, people.
I have a tiny minute slice of SPCX from owning VTI total market ETF but my 401K holds no SpaceX.
And guess what, your VTI which does track NASDAQ as part of it's index is effected by this inclusion rule.
Not only is he wrong that it doesn't impact him, because VTI is impacted, but the whole premise is wrong. "I'm not harmed" does not mean things are fine. If I go murder your neighbor, will you come to my trial and demand I go free because you weren't harmed? Should the judge let me go because he wasn't harmed?
QQQ tracks the Nasdaq 100. It's an index fund. If the index includes a new ticker, then QQQ has to buy it.
Buying QQQ doesn't seem like going out of one's way. I don't understand your comment. "ETFs and chill" is a very common investment strategy.
QQQ is more volatile and higher risk than the S&P 500, the people buying it should understand that.
Asked and answered. Whatever cute point you're trying to make is rendered moot by real market dynamics and index inclusion rules.
So, who is being forced to buy that index?
Quite likely that the only sensible one for most people (~global equities) will track S&P 500 internally. So essentially employees are being forced to hold whatever the index includes.
Hopefully it's less of a problem with Nasdaq, but it was a real worry.
Nobody has any idea what point you're trying to make, and the fact that you're repeating yourself and not being clearer makes everyone suspect that you don't have any idea either.
https://etfdb.com/index/nasdaq-100-index/ are the ETFs that track that index.
It is like saying that the worst thing about twin earthquakes in Venezuela was not the fact that there were two of them, because there could have been three.
If there's an issue I think it's earlier in the IPO pipeline.
The entire reason for these seasoning periods is to give the market time to determine what the company is actually worth to the market itself. Bypassing those rules to get it in earlier says to me that they don't believe it will settle at a price near its start.
If I IPO my lemonade stand at $1T valuation do I deserve to be in that "largest X companies" list? Or does it only make sense if I can maintain that valuation over time?
Index investing is too high a percentage of total investing so the rules matter to the whole market.
Nasdaq 100 has always been marketed as a tech-forward index. It would be a bit ridiculous if they didn’t include the most value tech companies on the market.
There was a potential scandal at S&P. But it didn’t happen. My personal guess is a lot of finance influencers latched onto this story. When it didn’t pan out they tried to maintain credibility by shifting it onto the Nasdaq 100, where it doesn’t make sense.
You are the biggest simp for the rich.
They pay you to post here in their defense?
Discourse on this site is no better than Twitter or Reddit, just another flavor of stupid.
I cut out my nasdaq100 and have generally allocated towards ex us
Schwab won't let you, because even if you're 95% right, you'll still probably lose 95% of your money...
It's quite difficult to be 100% right...
And if you are buying an instrument where you can lose more than you invested, the approach maybe wrong? :-)
This is precisely why shorting can lose more than you "invest", because you're not buying an instrument, you're selling it with the intent (or promise, depending on what kind of instrument it is) to buy it back later, hopefully at a lower price.
The risk is unbounded.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbo_(finance)
There are, as said, depending on juristic regime, products which do not let you lose more than you invested.
On top of this comes national regulation: E.g. in some EU countries, retail traders are exempt from s.c. "margin calls" and the broker is required by regulation to "just close and not ask for more"
Source: Im living in one of these EU countries
a company who says we'll have ai in space, meanwhile you can stick ai in the ocean and use ocean water to cool & still have access for upgrade cycles.
meanwhile china and japan and bezos all landing reusable rockets.
meanwhile maybe ai runs locally on phones (today's announcement of deepseek in the iphone in china)
ummmm. short in force!
there are easier ways to make money than betting against Elon Musk. See Tesla and how well it worked out for short sellers there.
I like SpaceX as a company (especially Starlink) but it's over valued in my opinion. In about a year when there's a little bit of public financial history and the dilution is over i'll probably buy in.
Note this has nothing to do with my feelings about SpaceX. I am Elon hater nr. 1 and hope SpaceX burns to dust, I only hope speculative investors burn down with it.
EDIT/CLARIFICATION: This post is fundamentally anti-capitalist. You may feel like I am mis-informed or misunderstanding. I am both of theses things if and only if Capitalism truly is self-evident.
My parent wanted to make some unearned money by making speculations and gambles. If they were allowed and if they were successful, they would have made a bunch of money while contributing nothing. Every single dollar they would have made in their speculative gamble would have come from somebody else who actually contributed and but didn’t get the full value from their work.
I am glad that my parent was denied the privileged to participate in this systematic exploitation. The ideal number of speculative investors is zero, and any movement towards that number is an improvement for workers.
You feel a stock is overvalued and you short it. You feel a stock is undervalued and you buy it. What's the difference?
Yeah, I know why people _want to_ (betting), but it doesn't serve a broader economic purpose.
It’s all betting.
If someone wants to dress it up in jargon or talk about beneficial second order effects, they can. But if putting money on an outcome you can’t control isn’t gambling, I don’t know what is.
Plus there's option traders who naturally need to go short sometimes.
You’re not going to make up a silly low number because you actually have to buy the bananas yourself at some point, and you help price discovery because now that guy isn’t buying bananas at a higher price than someone is willing to sell them for.
What I'm getting at is when does it go from investing, "I think this entity is going to take my money and use it to build a profitable factory that will then return to me a share of the profits", to just gambling "I think this stock price will change by the end of the day and I'm going to bet on it", and what are the positives and negatives of that?
Lots of replies either personally benefit or just assume the "way things are" is the best, but the stock market has gotten highly abstracted from the original intention of providing capital to grow companies via means other than bank loans.
I get the argument that shorts and friends help make the price the stock is being sold at more accurate, and I believe there's some truth there, but also we constantly see stock prices fluctuate by 10+% in a single day and I have trouble believing the actual value of all these companies changed that much in a single 24 period.
None of us have that crystal ball, so market participants try to guess at the future. It's not difficult to believe that those guesses can swing a lot in a single day. Just trying to figure out whether or the Hormuz will be open next week can give you whiplash.
its a reasonable expectation that 3 months after an IPO the price will be lower than it was at IPO
not really a bet so much as that on average the prices at IPO are a local maxima
(under the assumption your broker is managing their risk if your losses from a short position potentially exceeds capital available for liquidation if the trade moves against you)
Elon Musk is politicized so you're going to have people wanting to short against him, for reasons other than it being seen as a rational and sound investment strategy. This is one reason brokers tend to restrict this activity to certain types of investors who are more able to appreciate the risks, to say nothing of baseline necessities like needing a margin account to cover potential losses. Shorting is just very different than buying a stock.
So, it's doing pretty well!
https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/indices/equity/sp-500-ex-i...
Does the same rule work in crypto?
I love shaking up the firms. Gives normal people a chance to build wealth.
Buzz word filled posts like this are the most annoying to read on here
My best guess, it makes it harder to get loans in the future.
Which is pretty important! It's my understanding that from all that money they raised during their IPO, a good amount of it went right back out the door again to pay off misc loans for the twitter acquisition. They may only have bought themselves 6 more months of time given their purported burn rate (mostly driven by AI investment), so they're going to need more loans really soon, or another major stock offering.
If they had only ~6 more months they (+auditor) had to issue a warning. The 6 is not a hard number, AFAIK, but surely a point where it must be reported.
So honestly, I doubt it's the case.
It's better described as "it increases operational risks to SpaceX". When they face some future difficulty, the odds they can come out of it are lowered. Which is itself a factor that partners consider, including employees, because obviously people prefer to bet their livelihoods on more of a sure thing.
That article compares them to Oracle. Who are, as it goes, pretty similar: run by rich people with a media empire who have their teeth deep in government systems.
These bonds could get worse and worse but if US state and federal governments continue to put thumbs on scales it doesn't matter. The US free market isn't uniformly free.
What is to say that SpaceX and Oracle won't get these benefits? (Government buying bonds, trashing ratings agencies, leaning on banks to lend etc.)
Nothing obvious, I posit. So what is the value of a bond when a government is increasingly likely to manipulate the market for it?
And that is putting aside the second order of government interference: foreign governments putting their thumbs on the scale with their own investment funds and influenceable buyers, to buy influence over a government that favours these firms.
After all, if you truly believe what you say with conviction, the sensible thing to do would be to buy up as many SpaceX bonds as you can if you think they're so undervalued.
I am old enough to remember Long Term Capital Management.
There may be important factors that the bond market isn't aware of, just like most of them didn't know about the problems with mortgage-backed securities in 2008. But anything you and I are aware of, they probably are too.
Q: Why is this stock so valuable? A: Duh, because Musk is worth a kajillion dollars and everything he touches is gold!
Q: Why is Musk worth a kajillion dollars? A: Because he holds so many shares of extremely valuable companies, silly!
Spacex will raise more money again, they have no known path to structural profitability.
That can snowball: wider spreads → higher borrowing costs → more stress → wider spreads. The existing bonds' coupons are fixed, so the real bite is on future issuance and refinancing.
Lots of capital-intensive companies (SpaceX is definitely in this category) lean heavily on debt markets to fund ongoing investment and roll over maturing debt, so losing cheap access is a big deal.
This is the same thing. Stop.
Musk has made some tech innovations but he hasn't changed the lives of many generations of people yet. I'd only put him at the level of Edison
Elon Musk is probably up there, though. You could say people like Henry Ford are on his level, but Elon is certainly more broad in his scope. I think people like them are probably accelerationists, meaning someone else would have done what they’ve done eventually. That could be a long eventually though. It’s hard to compare them to people who shaped history through their actions that nobody else would have done the same way.
Is it like trying to say "the most important bacterium in a petri dish"?
Without diminishing the impact that Musk has had, I'm fairly certain that Musk isn't the answer. And either way, the intent of saying that Musk is the most important person in history I'm fairly certain wasn't a very grounded decision. I'm sure it was more an expression of reverence and fealty.
1. SpaceX issued long-term bonds whose coupon (ie, "interest rate") was 6.5%.
2. Those bonds are now trading for less than their face value. That means that if you buy one of those bonds on the secondary market, you will get a return (yield) of 7.387% (if the price of a bond goes down, but the coupon stays the same, the yield goes up).
3. This doesn't affect SpaceX directly, but it tells you that if SpaceX were to issue new bonds today, they would have to offer 7.4% coupon on them, not 6.5%. Note that even though that was caused by a 10% drop in the bond value, it's a 13% increase in cost of borrowing!
SpaceX is a cash-flow negative company that depends on debt and selling equity in order to pay the bills. They will have to issue bonds again, and those bonds will be more expensive.
Note that the shortest maturity bonds don't have to be repaid for 5 years, so the impact on cash is not going to manifest for a while...at least 5 years time (assuming they did another bond offering tomorrow). In that sense it's a nothingburger.
The immediate impact it could have is if spacex depends on issuing new, shorter-term debt (lines of credit, etc) whose price could be impacted by the market's perception of their riskiness.
That's your return if you buy one of those bonds and the bond is paid on schedule. Presumably the market consensus is there's some risk that payment may arrive late or not at all since the yield to maturity has increased since issuance and not as a result of underlying interest rate changes.
For a spread of 300 basis points that's still a very low probability, probably under 5%.
You'll probably get that, but you might not.
https://archive.is/tnSeY
https://github.com/aspenmayer/bypass-paywalls-chrome-clean-m...
https://github.com/aspenmayer/bypass-paywalls-chrome-clean-m...
Oh well… the article probably hasn't anything useful or important to say anyway. Time to move on.
Market capitalization takes into account the future value of the business, while equity (an accounting concept) only looks at present day cash & liabilities.
When a company gets liquidated, the future growth/value of the business is, pretty obviously, zero, so the "market cap" is irrelevant. What matters is what is left over once all debts are liquidated.
SpaceX's equity at the time of their IPO was $34 Billion (it's in the S1!). You can also see in their S1 that their cash decreases by about $8B a year, so unless things change they should be underwater in about 4 years.
He said he aimed to have 5000 Optimus robots out by end of 2025, 50000 by 2026 and 10 times that in 2027.
He promised in 2015 that full autonomous driving would arrive in 2 years and we aren't there yet 11 years later. He even said in 2016 that there would be coast-to-coast autonomous driving in 2017.
He promised manned missions to Mars by 2024-2025 in multiple interviews between 2011 and 2016.
He promised in 2016 that there would be solar roofs expansions by 2017 that didn't pan out, he promised AGI by 2025 in 2024.
Elon Musk has repeatedly lied about outcomes of his ventures, gotten crazy valuations based on those exaggerations and now people are starting to finally wake up that he isn't as good as his ego.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-new-yorker-interview/the-...
Why? Have US-backed NGOs never saved a single life with their spending?
You can argue it's not worth the spending, perhaps, but you really can't argue that it's not happening somewhere.
> This is a reason why the US is trillions in debt.
This is a tiny, tiny, nearly invisible fraction of that reason.
- USAID's final budget was $34 billion. That's already very real money, but it came from the discretionary budget - that giant bill of spending where the government decides what to spend money on: schools, roads, housing, and so on. The entire discretionary budget for 2025 was $1.9 trillion, so USAID made up almost 2% of all the US' federal discretionary spending!
- Nothing USAID was doing was irreplaceable. The vacuum their exit has created is being rapidly filled by a wide mix of other interests. So saying they are saving a life when they are just another replaceable entity, even if a rather large one, is misleading. It's kind of like saying Google is why we have web browsers.
- USAID and the CIA worked hand-in-hand. For instance one project was USAID/CIA starting a fake social media site [1] in Cuba specifically with the goal of trying to create an insurrection, which would undoubtedly be very bloody had they succeeded. So in your calculus you need to account for deaths caused by USAID as well.
- Many of their programs seemed geared towards the creation of dependencies rather than working to ensure the self sustainability of various places. I think this likely ties into the above issue. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for life, give a man a fish a day and you now control that man because he's dependent upon you. Sociopathic intelligence agencies blending with philanthropy is a rather horrific combination.
[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZunZuneo
So, tiny; a fraction of what we spend on much less useful things like the Iran war or huge gifts to ICE.
> The vacuum their exit has created is being rapidly filled by a wide mix of other interests.
Yeah, we don't really want China vacuuming up all of Africa. It was already looking like a growing problem before the USAID cuts.
> So in your calculus you need to account for deaths caused by USAID as well.
I mean, your one example cited didn't work and resulted in zero deaths. If we get to count that sort of thing, we'd have to start accounting for the soft power benefits of USAID (and those the CIA gets from the trade), too. Goodwill, intel, etc.
> Teach a man to fish and you feed him for life, give a man a fish a day and you now control that man because he's dependent upon you.
How does "take their fishing grounds (and other resources) for hundreds of years" figure into the analogy?
Trump's OBBBA will be another reason, expected to add several trillion in the next few years. So yeah, real cuts are probably needed, but the DOGE people aren't achieving that in net.
(This is a reference to Bill Clinton's extremely successful "Reinventing Government" initiative which actually balanced the federal budget until the next republican came along...)
Lots of rational people kept shorting, thinking sanity would prevail, and ended up losing bigly.
I think it's a way some businesses just do business and the market has not issued a correction to that. Maybe it should?
Name 3 accomplishments he made and I'll show you world class work done elsewhere by other companies. The only thing he did which was notable was Starlink and I'll gladly grant you that. China is about to eat Starlink's lunch with their own tech.
Again I think people overestimate Musk's contributions to the world.
2. Made the modern EV relatively commonplace; no other manufacturer was taking it seriously until Tesla succeeded, and took many years to catch up, although they have
3. Re-usable rockets / higher launch cadence leading to significantly cheaper costs to put things in space. No major competition yet.
Profitably reusable rockets were a major accomplishment. People like to argue against this. Every argument I've seen is either saying it doesn't actually save money or it wasn't new, neither of which is correct. It's very hard to argue with the numbers here; SpaceX is now launching more into orbit than every other launch provider combined.
I think the main reason people downplay these things is precisely because his own claims are so exaggerated. Doing 165 orbital launches in a year just doesn't sound impressive when he promised we'd be sending people to Mars years ago.
Autonomous driving is the clearest counterexample: by March 2026 Waymo had logged over 220 million rider-only miles with nobody in the driver's seat, and was doing 400,000+ rides per week across six US metros. Tesla's consumer product is still officially "Full Self-Driving (Supervised)," and Tesla itself says it does not make the car autonomous. Mercedes has Level 3 certification. Tesla has none.
Optimus missed the stated 5,000 robots in 2025. As of July 2026, Tesla still isn't selling it and is only preparing manufacturing capacity. Meanwhile Agility's Digit is in commercial warehouse deployment today. Solar Roof is worse: Musk targeted 1,000 installations per week, and Wood Mackenzie estimated Tesla averaged about 21 in 2022. Tesla's disputed the number but offered no replacement count.
SpaceX is the real exception. It genuinely leads, and the engineering is remarkable. But it's still a decade overdue on "crewed Mars by 2024." That's the point: on the one venture where "more progress than anyone else" is actually true, the promise is still failing by over a decade.
The criticism isn't that nothing comes to pass. It's that concrete near term promises repeatedly fail and get replaced by bigger ones. When a valuation depends on being uniquely far ahead, competitors catching up erases that premium fast.
Lies. Waymo beats Tesla in FSD. Optimus is nothing while China has full fucking martial arts robots. It's 2026 where's that 2025 manned Mars mission? Where's that 2025 AGI promise (currently running itself in circles.) His solar roof tile idea was a bunk plan and any regular roofer could've told you that.
China made a fucking electric car that can KITT jump. The only way Teslas get off the ground is when they hit curbs at batshit insane speeds.
Elon and his companies, outside of SpaceX, are generally frauds. Down to PayPal, which thinks it has a right to YOUR MONEY if you even so much as sneeze wrong (theft by contract.)
He is obviously a liar, a conman and morally suspect. But he has mastered the art of lying in a way that people want to believe. So much so that he can separate fools from their money to the tune of billions.
When you can do that, every economic institution on the planet wants a piece. It's a firehouse of ill gotten cash, and those supporting his staggering rise to power are there to grab a bit of filthy lucre for themselves. It's a wealth transfer than comes along maybe only a few times in a generation.
Everyone knows he's a complete fraud even as they enable him to pull off all these stunts.
It’s a variant of the people who pick “Jay-Z” in the meme question “would you rather have half a million dollars or lunch with Jay-Z?”
Could you imagine the abuse of power that could happen if one person held over 50% of the voting power at such a company?
Copied from google's response to "new york times governance"
Google's AI also says that the NYT has had that structure since 1957.
Ford has something similar from the 1930s. (Dodge did too until it was bought.) Raylon (synthetic textiles) did it in the 1920s and the company behind Jack Daniels did it right after Prohibition.
Google says that the NYSE banned dual-class between 1926 and 1986; I don't know how to reconcile that with Ford.
The common justification for this is that for a media company (NYT) you want a person or family to take responsibility for the editorial content, not a pure profit seeker. Facebook has it both ways and typically denies it has editorial control.
IMO, the flaw of markets is that they are short sighted. Sometimes this allows states to outmaneuver them with a longer view. Current exhibit A: China. Historically state intervention has been worse in the long run. But who knows. If we went into a depression a lot of people may think state intervention is a better system, as many admired the USSR during the Great Depression.
The theoretical arguments against socialism (or, more specifically, centrally planned state production) given by Hayek is that pricing is information and markets are computers on that information, ergo changing the information gives you a bad result. This certainly applied to the kinds of production the Soviet Union loved to engage in, but there's no particular reason why it can't apply to capitalist enterprise as well. I mean, Facebook's headcount or market cap alone is larger than some actual nation-states' population or GDP.
Just like how the USSR was nominally socialist but practically engaged in exactly the same state-controlled mode of production as feudalism, today's corporate entities are nominally capitalist but practically feudalist. The medieval historians in the room would probably balk at me using the word "feudalist" to describe either, so to be clear, what I mean is "an economic system in which the majority of profit goes to landowners / platform owners / the state / etc". In this economic mode, companies can warp markets to their whims in exactly the same way Congress can.
Except, Congress is democratically controlled. Joint-stock corporations are inherently oligarchial in structure: control of the company is assigned based on how many shares you can afford to buy, so the company answers to the amount of money that has capitalized it, and not any other concern[0]. The "innovation" in Facebook's IPO was to go from internal oligarchy to internal autocracy - to install Mark Zuckerberg as God-Emperor of Facebook and largely depose the shareholder class that normally runs publicly-traded entities.
You'd think markets would have priced in this risk, but Facebook IPO'd at the peak of its hype and was able to get away with this. The funny thing about Hayek's distributed market computer is that it does not actually reach perfectly efficient price computation. If it did, you could crack RSA keys by placing a sufficient number of suitably complex options trades. Markets can put a bounty on fixing incorrect pricing information, but they can also just refuse to accept corrected pricing. Everyone rushing into Facebook stock counteracted the few people concerned about the ridiculously autocratic governance structure. And now that it's obvious that such a thing was a problem, it's too late to challenge it, because now Facebook has platform holder money. Zuckerberg can bribe the shareholders to not care about their lack of control.
The history of state intervention is very fraught, but there's one subset of interventions that has a better track record than most: those intended to stymie autocrats of trade. The state cannot correctly set prices better than a market can, but it absolutely can prevent other state-like entities from doing the same thing. Likewise, it would behoove the world's competition law and securities regulators to investigate and regulate the use of dual-class shares to retain control over companies you do not own.
Unfortunately, the current administration is unlikely to do anything about this.
Actually, to make matters worse, Texas is deliberately trying to pour gasoline on the problem by disenfranchising minority shareholders. I believe this was done specifically to give Elon Musk even more control over SpaceX, because Delaware made the mistake of actually entertaining a shareholder lawsuit over Musk's pay packet. If Facebook was an autocracy that bribed its shareholders into compliance, then SpaceX is an autocracy that says, "Fuck you, pay me". If there's one thing that gives me hope, it's that the markets are rightfully rejecting this obvious attempt at offloading Musk's toxic junk onto retail. But this is mainly because Elon failed to generate suitable hype to get the market to buy into his trash, not because markets are actually good at pricing in this specific kind of risk.
[0] In fact, this is part of why you see companies go to great lengths to fight unions, even when negotiating with a union would be cheaper. The shareholder class considers democratic control (one worker, one vote) to be an existential threat.
That rule was dropped sometime in the 80s.
Berkshire Hathaway is possibly the most famous from the 80s/90s. The class A shares are significantly more expensive and proportionately even more powerful than the class B shares. The lower price version was important back when physical exchanges didn’t support fractional shares as they do today.
https://leeds-faculty.colorado.edu/bhagat/bb-022300.pdf
2. If his claims are incorrect and poorly sourced, feel free to call them out. But his research appears to have been rather exhaustive on this topic.
3. If there are other sources that contradict these claims and are well researched, links are welcome
And now they report that investors, many of whom are their customers, are suffering...
These things have a way of working themselves out. But look at almost all IPOs and the next 12 months the stock is down 50+% so I'd rather wait. And honestly when I buy, it's to hold 10+ years, not make a quick buck and it's because I believe in the value. You can believe in SpaceX but also still believe the market and the dynamics of IPOs is almost criminal for retail investors.
It's almost as bad as crypto token sales tbh.
https://site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/ipo-data/
And his data shows that IPOs for the most part perform about as well as their respective market. That is large multi-billion dollar IPOs perform about as well as the broad market, and smaller IPOs (which constitute the vast majority of IPOs) perform about as well as other small-cap companies.
In other words, investing in IPOs doesn't give much of an advantage or disadvantage compared to investing in other similarly sized companies.
What's true is that most stocks, including IPOs, don't do well in the long run. The half-life of a publicly traded company is something like 10 years.
The business fundamentals are rarely sound for modern IPOs, especially anything Elon adjacent. His companies are just as bad as crypto token sales in terms of their hype. Heck, some of the stock price appreciation of Tesla _was_ driven by their ownership of crypto for a year or two.
It really is weird market from outside. Like millions of cards waiting to be encapsulated in plastic with tiny label on them naming a number. Depending on number the value can go up multiple times. Each of these paid at least something like 20 dollars...
"Is the company market cap low? Do they have a decent product? Is it plausible they'll 10x? Yes -> Buy some amount I can afford loosing"
For example, Tesla IPO'd at $5B cap, it was perfectly plausible to believe they'd be worth $50B some day. Shopify IPO'd at $1.3B, Square at $3B, 10x was perfectly believable. Uber IPO'd at $75B, I did not believe they'd be worth $750B any time soon, or ever. Do I believe SpaceX will be worth 20T in like 10 years? Lol. Fmao even.
Today's IPOs at $1T+ means that private money figured this out and cut the retail public out, IPOs seems to be a really terrible deal these days.
So I wouldn't really give too many points to "the general public" for this one.
2.31% spread over treasuries is heading for junk bond status?
https://www.macrotrends.net/3006/high-yield-spread
https://www.macrotrends.net/3042/us-corporate-bond-spread
We'll see what ratings agencies think of the health of the company.
If DOGE had announced a 2-year phaseout of humanitarian aid, governments and NGOs might have had time to fill the gap. Doing so arbitrarily and abruptly was simply cruel.
Their S-1 projects $28 trillion TAM, with 93% of that attributed to AI, ~6% to connectivity via Starlink, and only ~1% for space launch capability.
Of their $20 billion CapEx spent in 2025, 60% was spent towards AI data-centers, 20% was spent towards Starlink satellites, and ~20% was spent towards actually building Starship and Falcon 9. That's gone up to nearly 80% towards AI in Q1 2026.
Of course, "AI" makes up only ~20% of their current revenues.
So... this company is priced as an AI startup but it's actually a satellite internet and space launch business.... or is it? Shame to see the coolest thing that Elon did be eaten by the AI monster.
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1181412/000162828026...
The company has plenty of revenue, and if needed can just turn off the r&d tap and become a boring company. Terrible for the shareholders obviously, but the bond holders will be fine.
I mean the bond yield is 6.65% over US Treasury returns of 4.75% so it's not like everyone's running in fear of their imminent collapse either. But they're less confident than they were when Elon company valuations looked immune to gravity.
Yep spacex can afford to have a declining value of equity… its talent who are mostly paid with stock will leave for its competitors - increasing the probability of bankruptcy. Putting the company in a tail spin heading for default.
So how are the bond holders gonna get paid in the event that happens? Oh in bankruptcy court? Lmao.
Raising equity is not a loophole either - ebit and ebitda drive measures of default risk.
Most of you on here should never ever talk about finance. It’s like you learned how to discount a cash flow and have it all figured out lololol
Two things:
Now, I'm a computer guy, love tech and have nothing against datacenters. But the recent anti-datacenter sentiment is not some luddite reaction. Data-centers cause serious social changes in property prices, electricity costs, water waste etc. Sure, there is a need for more datacenters and more compute, but lets not diminish the very real worries by the people or communities affected.
And contrary to what many of these hyper-scalers and the senators/politicians they lobby want to make you believe, datacenters do not bring in enough jobs to make it worth it for many of these communities.
Once a datacenter is built, minimum staff is required. And this is now very obvious since many of these companies are now also preaching for datacenters in space.
A quiet, average-sized warehouse-like building in an industrial area with a big power substation next to it often didn't bother a lot of people. A giant monster of a building being built in what was previously people's backyards with howling on-site power generation that got installed without any kind of air quality reviews because they're allegedly "temporary" and starts sucking the groudwater dry is a whole different story.
This is a datacenter: https://maps.app.goo.gl/pzSsUHXPaUuLGaDa9 I doubt many people even know its a datacenter. Its pretty much any other office building.
This is also a datacenter. I imagine just about everyone living nearby knows its a datacenter. https://maps.app.goo.gl/wR4NgcWQVhJAy5Gy6
- we don’t believe in startups (low quality scams)
- we don’t believe in technology. (It’s surveillance and distraction).
- we don’t believe in markets (regulate the RAM)
- we don’t believe in agency (unruly rule breakers)
And honestly we’ve seen a lot of events that strengthen those positions. Some of it is age as well. I’m just interested to see what comes next with so little faith in the industry.
I don’t see very many articles interested in new startups. It’s usually about them failing. I often use market explanations in my comments and these are not received favorably.
Elon actively interfered with US elections, and has done untold damage through his DOGE stunt. He uses his vast wealth in ways that have done real damage to the US, the US economy and in support of people who are dismantling American rights.
The boogeyman of "China/Asia" won't make me "support" a man who uses his money to make America worse. I do not support his actions and I do no wish to fund them regardless of the technology they create.
Here's the key point in the article: A month ago, the bond was priced at +175bps yield above treasuries with similar maturity, now it's priced at +231bps.