SpaceX IPO is showing investors that passive investing is not fully automatic. Index funds follow rules set by people, and those rules can change.

For all the fear and loathing about SpaceX’s fast-tracked entry into passive market indices, investors are realising that everything is actually active.

Two big stock indexes changed their rules recently in a way that will fast-track Elon Musk's company for inclusion.

SpaceX IPO is showing investors that passive investing is not fully automatic. Index funds follow rules set by people, and those rules can change.

SpaceX's Nasdaq IPO targets a $1.75-2 trillion valuation with just 3-4% float. Passive index funds could absorb 30% of tradable shares, risking a price

The company's IPO could land it in index funds, and thus in retirement accounts, whether investors want it or not.

SpaceX wants smaller-pocketed, mom-and-pop investors to play a big role in what may be the biggest IPO ever

SpaceX's planned $2 trillion Nasdaq IPO could land in major index funds within days of listing, giving passive investors automatic exposure through ETFs