SpaceX begins trading Friday, June 12, after pricing its IPO at $135 per share — a fixed pricing decision that, while unusual, sets up one of the most consequential single trading days in stock market history. The numbers behind the offering are not just large. They are the largest ever recorded across nearly every metric that matters, and they arrive at a moment when crypto markets are watching closely to see how much institutional capital this single listing absorbs.
$1.8 trillion — the largest post-IPO valuation ever
SpaceX will command a post-IPO valuation of approximately $1.8 trillion at its $135 per share price — surpassing the previous record holder, Saudi Aramco, which debuted at $1.7 trillion. The gap between first and second place on the all-time valuation list is now occupied entirely by SpaceX and Aramco, with Alibaba a distant third at $175 billion — meaning SpaceX's valuation alone is larger than the next eight companies on the list combined.
$75 billion raised — more than double the second-largest IPO ever
SpaceX will raise approximately $75 billion through the offering — making it, without qualification, the most lucrative IPO in history by a wide margin. Saudi Aramco's $25.6 billion raise, previously the record, is less than a third of SpaceX's figure. Alibaba raised $21.8 billion. SoftBank raised $21.4 billion. NTT Mobile raised $18.1 billion. SpaceX's $75 billion exceeds the combined proceeds of the next four largest IPOs in history.
$100 billion in retail investor orders
Perhaps the most remarkable figure is the retail demand. SpaceX submitted share orders from retail investors totaling approximately $100 billion, according to Bloomberg — a figure that reflects Elon Musk and SpaceX's deliberate strategy to make this IPO unusually accessible to individual investors and day traders. SpaceX offered an unprecedented allocation of shares directly to retail participants, a decision that has been debated for the volatility it could introduce but that has clearly generated enormous grassroots demand.
With $250 billion in total investor demand against $75 billion in available shares — a roughly 4x oversubscription — and $100 billion of that demand coming specifically from retail, the dynamics for Friday's opening trade are unusually unpredictable. Retail-heavy stocks have historically shown amplified first-day volatility in both directions, and a company of SpaceX's profile combined with this level of retail participation creates conditions for significant price swings once trading begins.
BlackRock alone bid $5 billion
Among institutional orders, BlackRock's reported $5 billion bid for SpaceX shares stands out for its sheer scale. To put that figure in context: $5 billion is nearly equal to the entire $5.55 billion in proceeds raised by Cerebras across its complete IPO — previously the largest offering of 2026 before SpaceX. A single asset manager's order for one company now nearly matches an entire prior record-setting IPO's total proceeds.
BlackRock's involvement is particularly notable given the asset manager's parallel role in crypto markets — BlackRock's IBIT remains the dominant Bitcoin ETF by assets despite its recent record outflow streak. The same institution allocating $5 billion toward SpaceX while its Bitcoin ETF experiences sustained redemptions illustrates the capital rotation dynamic that Tom Lee and others have described throughout 2026: institutional risk capital flowing toward AI and space economy opportunities at the same time it retreats from digital assets.
The business behind the numbers
SpaceX's valuation rests on a business that has evolved well beyond its origins as a rocket launch company. Starlink generated $11.4 billion in 2025, growing 50% year-over-year, establishing satellite internet as a major standalone revenue driver. More significantly, new AI compute contracts with Anthropic and Alphabet are projected to bring this segment to an annualized $26 billion run rate — assuming both partners follow through on the agreements.
Total 2025 revenue across all SpaceX segments reached $18 billion, with the company remaining unprofitable. Against a $1.8 trillion valuation, that implies a price-to-sales ratio of roughly 96 — among the most extreme valuation multiples ever assigned to a company of this size at IPO.
The historical base rate is not encouraging
Despite the extraordinary demand and historic figures, the base rate for IPO performance over multi-year horizons remains a relevant consideration. Approximately two-thirds of IPO stocks underperform the broader market three years after going public, primarily because premium valuations require sustained outsized growth that most companies fail to deliver. SpaceX's 96x price-to-sales ratio places it firmly in premium territory — meaning the company would need to grow its $18 billion revenue base into the hundreds of billions to justify its valuation through fundamentals alone, a transformation that, however aligned with Musk's stated vision, represents an extraordinary execution challenge.
The scene: Times Square protests, Maye Musk at Nasdaq
The human dimension of the listing was visible from the morning's events — Maye Musk arrived at the Nasdaq for the opening, while protesters gathered in Times Square, reflecting the polarized public sentiment that surrounds Elon Musk's ventures even as institutional and retail capital alike rush toward the offering in record amounts.
What it means for crypto markets
The scale of capital concentration in Friday's SpaceX listing — $75 billion raised, $250 billion in total demand, $100 billion from retail alone, and a single $5 billion order from BlackRock — represents the largest one-day liquidity event of 2026, dwarfing the entire $94 billion in net assets across the US spot Bitcoin ETF complex.
Bitcoin enters Friday trading near $61,000 to $62,000 following Wednesday's CPI report, which delivered a core inflation beat that provided modest relief without resolving the broader macro picture. Whether SpaceX's opening trade absorbs capital that would otherwise flow toward crypto, or whether the listing's completion frees up sidelined institutional cash for redeployment elsewhere including digital assets, will be one of the more interesting capital flow questions to track in the days following the IPO.
The retail enthusiasm visible in SpaceX's $100 billion in individual investor orders also offers an interesting comparison point to crypto's own retail base — at a moment when Santiment data showed Bitcoin social sentiment hitting its most bullish reading of 2026 even as institutional ETF flows remained negative, SpaceX's IPO demonstrates that retail risk appetite for high-profile, high-narrative assets remains intact. The question for crypto is whether that appetite can be redirected back toward digital assets once the SpaceX listing settles.
Market News: The Biggest Trading Day of the Decade Starts Tomorrow — Inside SpaceX's Record-Shattering $1.8 Trillion Debut
2026-06-12 13:35:10
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