The blistering public market debut of Elon Musk’s SpaceX has hit a major roadblock. The newly listed aerospace and artificial intelligence giant extended its sharp multi-day slide on Tuesday, erasing more than $600 billion in market value across just three trading sessions and triggering a broader reality check for high-flying tech valuations on Wall Street.
After an explosive post-listing rally that briefly pushed SpaceX’s market capitalization past tech titans Microsoft and Amazon, the stock has undergone a swift correction. The selloff pulled shares down toward the $150 mark—near its opening day debut price—though it remains above its initial public offering (IPO) price of $135.
The Anatomy of the Pullback
SpaceX’s dramatic market reversal stems from a shift in investor sentiment driven by three main factors:
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Inaugural Debt Venture: Sentiment cooled rapidly after the company announced plans for its first-ever investment-grade corporate bond sale. SpaceX is reportedly looking to raise at least $20 billion through senior unsecured notes to aggressively fund its rapidly expanding AI computing infrastructure and repay a bridge loan from its merger with xAI.
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The “Small Float” Effect: Analysts note that because only a small percentage of SpaceX shares are actively available to trade due to strict lockup restrictions on existing insiders, the stock is highly susceptible to massive, volatile swings when buying momentum slows.
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Wider Tech Shakeout: The correction didn’t happen in a vacuum. It heavily intersected with a broader semiconductor and hardware selloff on Wall Street, as investors grow increasingly cautious about the near-term returns on massive AI infrastructure spending.
Retail Investors Hold the Line
Despite the institutional exit, individual retail traders have continued to aggressively buy the dip. According to tracking data, retail inflows into SpaceX during its first week on the Nasdaq actually eclipsed the combined retail demand for the entire “Magnificent Seven” technology group over the same timeframe.
While the sudden $600 billion loss ranks among the largest short-term market value erosions for a newly public company, SpaceX still commands a market valuation hovering just around the $2 trillion mark. Wall Street watchers view the turbulence as a classic post-IPO cooling period rather than a structural breakdown of the company’s core space or AI initiatives.
