Space Exploration Technologies Corp‘s (NASDAQ:SPCX) blockbuster public debut has kept the ETF market on its toes, with the aerospace giant rapidly finding its way into portfolios far beyond the space-investing niche.
Within days of its June 12 listing, SpaceX was added to several space-focused and thematic ETFs, including the Procure Space ETF (NASDAQ:UFO), which assigned the stock a 6.17% portfolio weight following the latest VettaFi Space Index reconstitution. At the same time, Tuttle Capital Management added SPCX to three actively managed funds—the Tuttle Capital Space Industry Income Blast ETF (BATS:SPCI), Tuttle Capital UFO Disclosure ETF (BATS:UFOD), and Tuttle Capital Heavy Assets Low Obsolescence ETF (BATS:HALX).
The Tema Space Innovators ETF (NYSE:NASA), explicitly focused on the commercial space economy and the premier vehicle for investors seeking concentrated SpaceX exposure before the IPO, already allocates 12.35% of its portfolio to SPCX.
But it wasn’t the additions by space-themed ETFs that caught investors’ attention. Instead, market participants were surprised to discover that SpaceX had also appeared in the Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Value ETF (NYSE:SCHV), a fund typically associated with mature, lower-valuation companies rather than high-growth technology disruptors.
From Niche Space Play To Mainstream ETF Holding
SpaceX’s inclusion in specialized space ETFs was largely expected. The company is widely regarded as the dominant player in commercial launch services and operates Starlink, the world’s largest satellite network.
ProcureAM said SpaceX qualified for inclusion in the VettaFi Space Index after meeting its requirements for market capitalization, liquidity, and space-related revenues.
Meanwhile, Tuttle Capital described SpaceX as a natural fit across multiple strategies. While SPCI and UFOD gained exposure due to the company’s role in the space industry, HALX’s investment reflects a broader thesis tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure. According to the firm, SpaceX’s orbital data center initiative—solar-powered AI compute satellites built on Starlink technology—positions the company as part of the physical infrastructure supporting the AI economy.
What SCHV’s Tiny Stake Forces Us To Think
The bigger story may be SpaceX’s appearance in SCHV.
The allocation is negligible—just 0.012% of the fund’s roughly $15.8 billion asset base—and unlikely to have any meaningful impact on performance. Yet the holding has sparked discussion because it challenges traditional ETF labels.
Investors have long viewed SpaceX as a quintessential growth company. Its presence in a value-oriented fund highlights how rapidly evolving businesses can increasingly fit into multiple investment categories, particularly as index methodologies adapt to changing market realities.
The Next Phase Of ETF Adoption
The developments suggest that SpaceX’s ETF footprint could expand quickly in the coming months. Beyond dedicated space funds, the company could increasingly appear in AI infrastructure portfolios, broad-market indexes, growth funds, and factor-based strategies as its market capitalization and trading history mature.
For ETF investors, SpaceX is no longer just a niche space-industry bet. It is rapidly becoming a stock that fund managers across multiple categories believe they cannot afford to ignore.
Photo: Artsiom P / Shutterstock
