The biggest IPO ever lists next week. Tesla holders: panic or party?
SpaceX (SPCX) lists June 12 at a $1.75T valuation. The loudest argument isn't among IPO chasers — it's among Tesla (TSLA) shareholders. Next Friday, June 12, SpaceX rings the bell on Nasdaq. Price 135 dollars, 555.6 million shares, raising 75 billion dollars in one shot. The largest IPO in history. Valuation: 1.75 trillion dollars. The forums lit up. And the angriest voices aren't the people trying to get IPO allocation — they're Tesla (TSLA) shareholders. Why? Because both companies answer to the same man. 01 — A quick primer for those new to Tesla Tesla went public in June 2010 at 17 dollars a share. It does three things: sells electric cars (Model 3/Y for volume, plus Cybertruck), sells energy storage (Megapack), and sells a story (FSD self-driving, Robotaxi, the Optimus humanoid robot)
How Retail Investors Can Actually Play the SpaceX IPO
SpaceX’s IPO is getting close. Reuters has reported a tentative timeline of a June 4 roadshow and June 11 pricing, although the final schedule will still depend on SEC review and the actual underwriting process. But the market has already started trading the story. Since SpaceX’s confidential filing on April 1, the entire commercial space value chain has been repeatedly repriced. For retail investors, the real question is simple: how can you actually get exposure? There are not many clean options. So in this post, I’ll walk through the main public-market routes: which ETF genuinely holds private SpaceX exposure, which product looks like a SpaceX proxy but is actually a NAV-premium trap, and which ETFs or single stocks are better understood as “space-sector side bets.” NASA: The ETF That Ac
SpaceX’s Prospectus Reveals Historic Numbers — Do Investors Still Have a Chance to Get In?
Musk Drops a Bombshell! SpaceX’s IPO Filing Reveals Historic Numbers. Can Ordinary Investors Still Get In? On May 20, Eastern Time, SpaceX officially filed its S-1 registration statement with the SEC. The company is reportedly targeting a valuation between $1.75 trillion and $2 trillion. If the IPO is completed at that level, it would become the largest public listing in U.S. market history. I spent the weekend going through the 190-page filing. There is a lot inside, and some of the numbers are big enough to change how investors should think about SpaceX. So in this article, I want to walk through the filing in plain language: what the company does, where the money comes from, where the risks are, and why this IPO could become one of the defining market events of the space economy. SpaceX