Elon Musk’s SpaceX is drawing investor demand approaching four times the size of its planned $75 billion initial public offering underscoring strong appetite for one of the largest stock market debuts in history even as it pressures technology stocks and cryptocurrencies.
Orders for the offering have exceeded $250 billion, according to people familiar with the matter, putting the deal’s over-subscription rate between three-and-a-half and four times the shares available.
The IPO is expected to price on June 11 2026 and begin trading on Nasdaq on June 12 2026.
The offering values the Starbase, Texas-based company at roughly $1.8 trillion and would surpass previous records for public listings, cementing SpaceX’s position among the world’s most valuable companies.
Strong demand has been driven by large orders from long-only institutional funds while company executives including President Gwynne Shotwell, and Chief Financial Officer, Bret Johnsen, have been meeting investors during an extensive roadshow. Musk has also participated in some investor presentations, sources said.
The IPO comes amid heightened volatility across financial markets. U.S. technology stocks have fallen in recent sessions while the cryptocurrency market has shed more than $180 billion in value over the past week prompting speculation that investors are selling existing positions to raise cash for SpaceX shares.
Market strategists say the offering is acting as a magnet for speculative capital that might otherwise flow into high-growth technology stocks or digital assets.
“Investors are repositioning for what is likely to be the most important equity offering of the decade,” said one portfolio manager involved in the deal.
Several analysts have pointed to a temporary rotation out of technology stocks and cryptocurrencies as investors seek exposure to SpaceX and other anticipated artificial intelligence-related listings.
Bitcoin has come under pressure in recent weeks as retail investors, a key source of demand for digital assets, increasingly look toward high-profile equity offerings tied to the artificial intelligence boom. Analysts also cite broader concerns over interest rates and profit-taking by large crypto holders as contributing factors.
SpaceX’s prospectus highlights the company’s dominant position in orbital launches, the rapid growth of its Starlink satellite internet business, and ambitions to expand into space-based computing infrastructure designed to support future AI workloads.
While investors remain focused on SpaceX’s debut, some market observers warn that the concentration of capital into a handful of mega-listings could make fundraising more difficult for smaller technology companies seeking to go public later this year.
If demand remains strong through pricing, the offering could become a defining test of investor appetite for large-scale growth companies and a major catalyst for capital flows across technology, artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency markets.
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