How the Largest IPO in history became your problem
8 hours ago
- #retirement savings
- #index funds
- #IPO
- Many retirement savings systems globally rely on passive investments in default funds that track major stock indices.
- Large pension funds worldwide, like AustralianSuper, CalPERS, NEST, and GPIF, hold significant assets in these index-tracking portfolios.
- Index inclusion rules, such as profitability requirements and public float, were designed to ensure financial stability and market integrity.
- Recent changes to index methodologies, like Nasdaq's removal of float requirements and shortened listing periods, were made to accommodate companies like SpaceX.
- SpaceX's IPO involves a dual-class share structure, giving public investors limited voting rights and exposing them to downside risks.
- Other AI companies, such as OpenAI and Anthropic, are also planning listings under revised rules despite lacking consistent profitability.
- These changes enable a transfer of private risk to public retirement savers via mandatory index fund investments.
- International regulators lack authority over private American index providers, creating a governance gap.
- Some institutional investors objected to these changes, but the rule revisions proceeded for key listings.
- Retirement savings may now include high-risk AI bets due to rule changes made by private companies, not by fund managers or savers.