SpaceX investors grapple with volatility amid big swings
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Rollercoaster. That’s probably the most accurate word to describe SpaceX’s opening two weeks as a public company.
The stock surged for several successive days following a record-breaking IPO, briefly overtaking both Amazon and Microsoft in terms of market cap and rising more than 60% on the initial share offering price of $135.
But the good times weren’t set to last. Daily drops of 5% and 4% were followed by a 16% slump as jitters crept into the market. Steadier days followed, with single point moves in either direction.
The volatility underscores the whipsaw nature of a story-driven stock.
Lofty sci-fi ambitions, huge coverage in the *ahem* media and a founder with a cult-like following whipped up a frenzy of excitement around the company.
“Most stocks trade based on how their multiple of earnings compares to other comparable stocks,” Gil Luria, head of technology research at D.A. Davidson, told me.
“Elon Musk companies don’t really do that.” Musk’s ventures instead trade on expectations, he added.
“Tesla trades more on [autonomous driving service] Robotaxi and [humanoid robot] Optimus than they do on selling cars, and SpaceX trades more on the promise of Mars exploration, or at least data centers in space,” said Luria.
A video displays Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX, after the company’s initial public offering at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York on June 12, 2026.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Retail investors bought into that forward-looking narrative in droves.
SpaceX “embodies many of the qualities that have historically resonated with retail investors: a transformational technology story, a bold vision of the future, a celebrity founder and unparalleled media attention,” Viraj Patel, global macro strategist at Vanda, said.
In the first five trading sessions, retail investors bought a net $405 million of SpaceX shares, comfortably the strongest retail IPO debut in recent history, said research firm Vanda.
“For SpaceX, the ‘cult of Elon’ pulls in more retail investors and adds extra hype that can add a lot to volatility as we saw with Tesla share prices,” Mike Coop, chief investment officer, EMEA at Morningstar Wealth, told me. Morningstar analysts caused a stir in the run-up to SpaceX’s IPO, writing that the stock was worth less than half of its $1.75 trillion target.
After a bullish initial few days on the public markets, fundamentals became a bigger driver of the price causing a “hangover,” said Kyle Rodda, senior market analyst at Capital.com.
Musk has been, in a somewhat predictable fashion, touting sky-high revenue growth in years to come. He said on June 14 that the company “might be able to reach approximately” $1 trillion revenue in 2030.
That would mark a huge jump from the $18.7 billion in revenue SpaceX made in 2025. The company posted a $4.9 billion net loss in 2025, and it lost $4.28 billion in the first quarter of this…
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