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SpaceX Falls 16% in Three Days. The IPO Euphoria Is Over.

Jun 23, 2026

SpaceX Falls 16% in Three Days. The IPO Euphoria Is Over.

SPCX dropped 16.4% today — its third consecutive daily decline — erasing roughly $600 billion in market cap from its all-time high. The trigger: SpaceX filing for a $20 billion investment-grade bond offering to fund its AI buildout. The real question for traders holding SPCX is no longer "will it go higher" — it's whether $154 is a floor or a falling knife.

Key Takeaways

  1. SPCX closed at $154.60 on Monday, down 16.43% — third straight daily decline; stock has lost nearly 25% from its all-time high, wiping out ~$600B in market cap
  2. SpaceX filed for a $20 billion investment-grade bond offering — its first ever — to fund xAI's AI infrastructure buildout; confirms xAI cash burn is accelerating beyond what Starlink can self-fund
  3. Despite the three-day crash, SPCX is still +14.5% above its $135 IPO price — buyers who got IPO allocation are still in the green; open-market buyers above $160 are now underwater
  4. Broader market split: Dow +0.29% to 51,712; S&P 500 −0.37% to 7,472; Nasdaq −1.32% to 26,166 — Alphabet −5%, Amazon −4.8%, Microsoft −3% led tech lower

What Happened

$20 billion in new debt. $600 billion in market cap erased. Three days.

SPCX closed at $154.60 Monday, down 16.43% — its third consecutive daily decline since hitting its post-IPO all-time high. The proximate cause: SpaceX filed for a $20 billion investment-grade bond offering, its first-ever public debt issuance, described as the beginning of a "massive borrowing spree" to fund xAI's AI infrastructure ambitions. Combined with Friday's and Thursday's declines, SPCX has now lost approximately 25% from its all-time high, erasing roughly $600 billion in market cap. The stock closed at $154.60 — still 14.5% above its $135 IPO price, meaning retail investors who received IPO allocations remain in the green, while anyone who bought in the open market above $160 is now underwater. The broader market was mixed: the Dow rose 0.29% to 51,712.71 — almost entirely due to Caterpillar's 4% gain — while the Nasdaq fell 1.32% to 26,166.60, dragged down by Alphabet (−5%), Amazon (−4.8%), and Microsoft (−3%). Micron rose 6.82% ahead of Thursday's earnings, aided by news of a new Anthropic supply deal.

  1. $154.60 SPCX close · −16.43% today · −25% from all-time high
  2. $20B New bond offering filed · SpaceX's first investment-grade debt issuance
  3. +14.5% SPCX still above $135 IPO price · IPO allocation holders still in the green
  4. +6.82% Micron (MU) today · Anthropic supply deal · reports Thursday


Why It Matters

The $20B bond offering confirms what the S-1 warned: xAI is burning faster than Starlink can fund it

When we covered SpaceX's S-1 in May, the central risk was explicit: xAI's net cash burn approached $9 billion in a single quarter, and the $75 billion IPO raise covered only eight quarters at that pace — assuming no AI revenue growth. Today's $20 billion bond offering arrives less than two weeks after the IPO closed. That is not a sign of strength — it is confirmation that xAI's capex acceleration has already outpaced the IPO proceeds. SpaceX is going back to the debt market before it has published a single quarter of public earnings.

For traders, the $20B bond offering matters in two ways. First, it is equity dilutive in sentiment if not in structure: more debt means more interest expense, which compresses the already-thin path to net income profitability. Second, it signals that the capital requirements for xAI are open-ended — not capped at the $75B IPO raise. Morningstar's $780 billion fair value estimate, which looked extreme when SPCX was trading at $176, now looks less eccentric at $154. At $135 — the IPO price — a bounce is likely on pure technical support grounds. Below $135, the narrative shifts from "IPO dip buyer opportunity" to "the bears were right."

The IPO raised $75 billion. Ten days later, SpaceX filed for $20 billion more in debt. That is not a company with a funding problem — Starlink's cash flows are real. It is a company whose AI ambitions have no ceiling, and therefore no defined capital requirement. That open-endedness is exactly what a 110× revenue multiple cannot afford.

The broader tech selloff compounds the picture. Alphabet fell 5% on reports of AI talent departures — a direct read-through to the competitive pressure that xAI is trying to win. Amazon fell 4.8%, Microsoft 3%. The mega-cap AI trade that powered the market's 8-week winning streak into Memorial Day is showing its first signs of institutional profit-taking. The Russell 2000 closed at a historic 3,000 milestone today — small caps are thriving precisely because investors are rotating out of high-multiple mega-cap tech. That rotation is the real macro story underneath the SPCX headline.

Key Risk: SPCX is still 14.5% above its IPO price, which means IPO lockup holders have no incentive to panic-sell. But the 4% public float means any acceleration in selling — from retail investors who bought above $160, or from index funds that must rebalance after the market cap decline — can move SPCX another 10–15% in a single session with very little volume. The $135 IPO price is the line in the sand. A close below it would be the most bearish signal the stock has seen.

What Traders Should Watch Next

  1. Jun 23–24: SPCX stabilization or continued decline. Watch whether the stock finds support at $150 — the round number that roughly splits the distance between the IPO price ($135) and last week's high ($176). A close above $155 for two consecutive days signals the selloff is exhausting. A break below $145 opens the path to the IPO price test.
  2. Jun 25: Micron (MU) earnings after close + May PCE inflation. MU's Anthropic deal and today's 6.82% gain set up a high-expectations print. The AI memory thesis needs HBM revenue guidance above $4B for Q3 to justify the move toward Deutsche Bank's $1,500 target. May PCE is the last major inflation read before July 11 CPI — a soft print here would immediately ease Warsh's hike timeline and provide relief to rate-sensitive names including SPCX.
  3. Jul 11: June CPI. With oil now at $75.30, the energy inflation that drove May CPI to 4.2% is reversing rapidly. A June CPI print below 3.5% would collapse October hike odds — the single biggest catalyst to stabilize SPCX's valuation multiple. SPCX's path to recovery runs directly through this number.
  4. Sep 2: SpaceX first earnings call. The only event that replaces narrative with data. The two numbers that matter: Starlink subscriber growth vs $24B 2026 revenue target, and xAI quarterly revenue vs the capex the $20B bond offering is funding. Until September 2, every SPCX move is sentiment-driven — and sentiment just turned.


How to Navigate SPCX's Selloff with Profit Pro

Whether you hold SPCX, are watching for an entry, or want exposure to the space sector without the volatility — here's how to stay positioned with the right tools.

  1. Price Alerts Set three SPCX alerts now: $145 (support test — first line where IPO allocation buyers consider adding), $135 (IPO price — the ultimate line in the sand; a close below here is a structural breakdown), and $165 (recovery signal — a close above this level confirms the selloff has found a floor).
  2. Watchlists The rotation trade is visible today: Russell 2000 hit 3,000 while mega-cap tech sold off. Build a "Rotation Beneficiaries" watchlist: IWM (Russell 2000 ETF), XLF (financials), INTC (Apple chip deal), MU (Anthropic deal, earnings Thursday), CAT (Dow leader today). These are the assets absorbing the capital leaving SPCX, Alphabet, and Amazon.
  3. Advanced Screeners Screen for satellite and space stocks with revenue growth above 15%, EBITDA positive, and market cap under $8B — the names that provide SpaceX sector exposure without the open-ended xAI capital commitment risk. SPCX's selloff creates a valuation re-rating opportunity in the adjacent space infrastructure plays.
  4. Billionaire Portfolios Track whether institutional funds that received $135 IPO allocations are holding or trimming — their behavior in the next five trading days is the most important signal for where SPCX finds its true institutional support floor. Large funds selling at $155 are telling you the fair value debate has shifted; large funds adding are signaling the dip is buyable.

The IPO euphoria is over. The fundamental debate begins. Profit Pro gives you the tools to trade both sides.

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