
Some analysts are warning that this is how the AI bubble breaks the S&P 500. The argument is detailed and worth understanding even if you do not agree with the conclusion.
The core claim is that three AI and space giants are going public near the same window with a combined valuation approaching $4 trillion. SpaceX already completed the largest IPO ever, raising $75 billion and now trading near $2.2 trillion. OpenAI has filed confidentially targeting around $1 trillion. Anthropic is heading toward a similar figure.
The argument is that this much capital does not appear from nowhere. Funds raise cash to buy into these new listings by selling what they already hold, and the first targets are usually the biggest winners. Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, the same names currently holding up roughly a third of the entire S&P 500.
The bears point to historical precedent. Every major bubble, the Roaring Twenties, Japan in the 1980s, the dot-com era, had a handful of companies considered too important to fall. Every time investors said this time is different. Every time the market eventually broke. In the dot-com crash even the best companies were crushed once insiders cashed out. Amazon fell 95%. Microsoft fell 65%. Intel fell 80%. Yahoo fell 97%.
The mechanism described is straightforward. Winners hold up the index, new giants go public, funds rotate out of old winners into the new listings, insiders take their liquidity, and retail is left holding whatever is left.
The counter argument is that SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic have real revenue, real technology, and genuine global demand, unlike many dot-com companies that had neither.
Both sides have serious conviction behind them. The next several months will determine which read on this moment was correct.
