TRV-2026-0094Version 1 · Certified
Reason for this version
Certified into the record
Canonical text (the exact bytes fingerprinted)
TRUVACE RECORD VERSION record: TRV-2026-0094 version: 1 kind: certified reason: Certified into the record timestamp: 2026-07-12T20:55:48.367857Z status: published lens: trace sector: business headline: After SpaceX’s huge IPO, Americans’ financial future will be bound to AI dek: Americans are growing worried about what artificial intelligence portends for their futures. Eight in 10 Americans report concern over AI, compared with a third who report being excited, according to a recent Quinnipiac poll. More than half think it will do more harm than good in their daily lives. Seven out of 10 think it will reduce the number of available jobs. Skeptical though they may be, they are about to get more AI rammed down their throats and stuck into their pension plans and their investment portfolios, whether they want it or not – binding their futures ever more tightly to the frenzied, risky, multibillion-dollar dash by technology moguls to develop machines capable of mimicking human thought processes to take over cognitive tasks. First up is this week’s massive $75bn initial public offering (IPO) for Elon Musk’s SpaceX, the largest ever, which at $135 a share will value the company at a cool $1.77tn, among the 10 largest companies in the world by market capitalization. While the company makes most of its money these days selling internet access, it largely needs the money to finance Musk’s vast AI ambitions, which include blasting datacenters into orbit. The offering is just the first in a series: both Anthropic and OpenAI have already filed paperwork for their own IPOs later in the year, which will add two multitrillion-dollar artificial intelligence behemoths to the US’s main stock indices. Even investors who don’t care to buy their stock will end up owning a bunch, either in their 401(k) retirement plans or among their holdings of market index funds – supposedly safer investments for non-professional investors, built to reflect the entire market – which are forced to buy AI shares in proportion to their weighting in stock indices like the Nasdaq and the S&P. This may not happen right away, but it will happen. Musk has been lobbying for SpaceX to be quickly invited on to the indices, which would force index funds to buy the stock, no matter its price, and providing it a hefty boost. The tech-heavy Nasdaq changed its rules to fast-track the listing of behemoths like SpaceX. So did the FTSE Russell, to ease the entry of megacaps to its US indices. Standard & Poor’s is sticking to its rules. This means SpaceX will have to post a profit – which it has not yet done – make a minimum set of shares available to the public and wait about a year to get on to the S&P 500, the most tracked index. The SpaceX offering, moreover, amounts to less than 5% of its shares – which will limit its immediate footprint. But if SpaceX follows the pattern set by large firms after their IPOs, some half of its shares could be trading openly by the time it joins the S&P 500 next year. This would give it about a 1.5% share of the S&P 500’s market capitalization of more than $60tn – forcing index funds to plow hundreds of billions into Elon Musk’s gambit to become the world’s first trillionaire. If this sounds like a risky bet, it is. Musk, the guy who at the helm of “Doge” tried to devastate the federal bureaucracy, firing employees hand over fist, and who helped dismantle USAID despite knowing it would lead to hundreds of thousands of deaths, will have sole control over the company on which the retirement of many Americans may depend, allowing him to follow his baser instincts wherever they lead. And that’s not the half of it. The so-called “magnificent seven” tech goliaths – Nvidia, Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta and gain_reading: After SpaceX’s huge IPO, Americans’ financial future will be bound to AI: Musk has been lobbying for SpaceX to be quickly invited on to the indices, which would force index funds to buy the stock, no matter its price, and providing it a hefty boost. problem_reading: Eight in 10 Americans report concern over AI, compared with a third who report being excited, according to a recent Quinnipiac poll. limitation: Automated evidence review: this reading is limited to the cited source set and may change as contradicting evidence or broader outcome data enters the record. tag: Automated dual reading key_points: Americans are growing worried about what artificial intelligence portends for their futures. | Eight in 10 Americans report concern over AI, compared with a third who report being excited, according to a recent Quinnipiac poll. | More than half think it will do more harm than good in their daily lives. rundown: Americans are growing worried about what artificial intelligence portends for their futures. Eight in 10 Americans report concern over AI, compared with a third who report being excited, according to a recent Quinnipiac poll. More than half think it will do more harm than good in their daily lives. Seven out of 10 think it will reduce the number of available jobs. sources: - journalism | The Guardian | https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/jun/12/ai-ipos-stock-market | 2026-06-12 prev: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
- sha256
- 68a52ea244198ba4a3b15c9e0cb8631e73d0a31e90a0e84d92478a60166637c1
- previous
- 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Verify this record
How to verify without trusting this page
Fetch the canonical text of any version from /api/record/TRV-2026-0094 and hash it yourself — for example shasum -a 256 on the saved canonical field. The result must equal content_hash, and each version’s text ends with prev:followed by the prior version’s hash (version 1 chains to 64 zeros). If a single character of any version had been altered since certification, the chain would not reproduce.