Overview:

SpaceX's market debut is dominating the opening bell on June 12, with shares indicated near $175 against a $135 IPO price on four-times-oversubscribed demand. The S&P 500 opened at 7,287.67 as broader sentiment turned cautious, held in check by geopolitical relief from Iran deal progress that simultaneously knocked crude oil down 2% to $85 per barrel. Rocket Lab added more than 5% after confirming its Nasdaq-100 inclusion effective June 22, while EchoStar climbed toward $139 on its $8.5 billion

NEW YORK — SpaceX began trading Friday morning with shares indicated near $175 — 30% above their $135 IPO price — as Wall Street absorbed the largest public offering in history against a broader tape that opened in the red.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this open: SpaceX is eating the room. When the most anticipated IPO in a generation opens 30% above price on a day the S&P is sliding, that is capital rotation, not broad risk appetite. The real question is whether the euphoria around SPCX is masking genuine weakness in the index — or simply crowding out the marginal buyer. I’m watching whether SPX can hold 7,257, the morning low. A close below that level would tell me the Iran peace relief is already priced and the heavy SpaceX allocation is creating a vacuum elsewhere. The contrarian angle here? Four-times oversubscribed sounds bulletproof, but the biggest IPOs in history have a habit of marking short-term tops in the sectors they crown. Watch what SPCX does in the final 30 minutes of trading — not the first 15.

A Market Pulled in Three Directions

The S&P 500 opened at 7,287.67, down from Thursday’s close of 7,394.30, as three simultaneous forces competed for the tape’s attention: the SpaceX debut, a developing Iran peace deal, and an index reconstitution event that sent several mid-cap names sharply higher. The Nasdaq-100 opened at 28,731.16, its own trajectory complicated by the same cross-currents.

Crude oil fell roughly 2% to near $85 per barrel after President Trump said overnight he had canceled planned strikes on Iran, describing a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as close to finalized. That geopolitical relief trade cut both ways: energy names retreated while materials stocks surged on the thesis that a reopened trade route would ignite industrial demand. Gold climbed 2% and silver jumped 5%, with Freeport-McMoRan (FCX), MP Materials, and U.S. Rare Earth each up 2% or more at the bell.

The macro backdrop, in other words, is not clean. Stocks that benefit from an Iran deal are up. Stocks that benefit from a SpaceX-era space economy are up. And the index itself is lower. That kind of divergence at the open tends to resolve in the direction of whatever theme has the most capital behind it — and today, that is unambiguously SpaceX. For a broader look at how this market has been navigating geopolitical risk all week, see our earlier piece on whether Iran’s near-miss changed everything for this market.

Data Visual
Opening Bell % Change: Key Movers on June 12, 2026
Shows the opening-hour percentage moves for the five most active names at the bell, giving traders a quick read on where momentum is concentrated.
Opening Bell % Change: Key Movers on June 12, 2026
Values in %

Opening Bell Standout — SpaceX (SPCX)

SpaceX priced at $135 per share Thursday evening, raising approximately $75 billion in what the company says will fund data center expansion and additional compute capacity. The offering of 555.5 million shares implies a total market capitalization of roughly $1.77 trillion — placing it, at the open, among the five largest companies in the world by market value. Pre-market perpetual futures were trading near $172 overnight, and early opening indications pushed that premium further to $175. Demand was reportedly more than four times the available supply.

Key Stat
4× oversubscribed
SpaceX’s IPO book was more than four times covered — a signal of institutional demand, but also a warning that most buyers didn’t get the allocation they wanted and may chase in early trading.

Analyst coverage landed swiftly. Oppenheimer initiated with an Outperform and a $190 price target — roughly 41% above the IPO price. New Street Research put its target at $165. Morningstar, by contrast, assigned a standalone valuation of $780 billion, less than half the implied market cap at the opening indication, raising questions about what growth assumptions justify a $1.77 trillion price tag on day one. That gap between the most bullish sell-side target and the opening trade is the tension every SpaceX buyer carries into the weekend. We explored the inflation context around this IPO in detail earlier this week: Can a SpaceX IPO rally survive 4.2% inflation?

Analyst Note
Oppenheimer initiated SpaceX with an Outperform rating and a $190 price target, citing the company’s dominant launch market position and accelerating Starlink monetization. New Street Research set a more conservative $165 target. Notably, Morningstar’s intrinsic valuation of $780 billion sits less than half the $1.77 trillion implied by Friday’s opening indications — a divergence that suggests the opening trade is pricing in years of execution that has yet to materialize.
Data Visual
SpaceX (SPCX) Price Journey: From Pre-Market Futures to Opening Indication
Tracks how SpaceX pricing evolved from IPO price through overnight futures to opening-bell indications, illustrating the demand premium traders are paying at the open.
SpaceX (SPCX) Price Journey: From Pre-Market Futures to Opening Indication
Values in $

The Reconstitution Trade — Rocket Lab and the Nasdaq-100 Effect

Away from SpaceX, the Nasdaq-100 reconstitution story is generating real price action. Rocket Lab (RKLB) confirmed Thursday that it will join the index effective June 22, sending shares up 9.26% to close at $114.78 on Thursday before adding another 5.7% in early Friday trading, touching $122.98 in extended hours. For context, the stock has already gained approximately 65% year-to-date and more than 300% over the past year, powered by record quarterly revenue of $200.3 million — a 63.5% year-over-year increase — and a backlog that now stands at $2.2 billion.

The index addition creates a mechanical buying floor: every passive fund tracking the Nasdaq-100 must own RKLB before June 22. That demand is largely non-discretionary. The current analyst consensus price target sits at $95.77, a figure the stock has already eclipsed by a wide margin. KGI Securities just initiated with a Neutral at $105. The more aggressive view puts RKLB between $225 and $240 over the next three months — a call that requires both execution and the SpaceX IPO halo to keep the space sector in favor. What breaks this trade is simple: a SpaceX first-day close below $165 would drain sentiment from the entire sector by Monday morning.

Astera Labs (ALAB) and CoreWeave (CRWV) are also joining the Nasdaq-100 in the same reconstitution, up 5.6% and 5% respectively at the open. The AAII sentiment survey, however, issued a quiet warning this week: bearish sentiment jumped more than 10 percentage points to 47.7% in the week ending June 10, with bullish sentiment falling to 30.4%. Retail investors are skeptical of this rally even as institutional money piles into the IPO. That divergence rarely resolves in a straight line.

EchoStar (SATS) is the quieter but perhaps more structurally interesting story at the open. Shares climbed to around $139 Friday, building on Thursday’s 11.19% gain, after the company confirmed it is receiving up to $8.5 billion in cash and up to $8.5 billion in SpaceX stock as part of its spectrum sale proceeds. EchoStar is, in effect, a leveraged proxy on the SpaceX listing. TD Cowen analyst Greg Williams has a $155 price target on the name, and the company’s most recent quarter showed adjusted EBITDA of $583.7 million against a Street estimate of just $355.3 million — a 64% beat that the market is only now fully pricing in.

What the Tape Needs to Prove in the First Hour

The S&P 500’s opening range puts two levels in focus. On the downside, 7,257 is the morning low and the level to watch for any sign that the SpaceX liquidity drain is pulling capital out of the index. Below that, the 50-day moving average sits near 7,230, and a close beneath that line would be the first technically meaningful deterioration since the index rebounded from that level earlier this week. On the upside, recapturing 7,394 — Thursday’s close — would confirm that the Iran relief trade and SpaceX enthusiasm are net additive to the index rather than rotational.

For SPCX itself, Oppenheimer’s $190 target sets an early ceiling for rational bulls. A first-day close above $175 would validate the opening indication and give momentum traders a reason to hold through the weekend. A close below $165 — New Street’s target — would suggest the IPO pop was front-loaded and that early allocations are being flipped. The market’s ability to hold its ground while absorbing $75 billion in new issuance is itself a statement about underlying liquidity. For more on the sentiment backdrop heading into this week, see our analysis of whether the market’s recent bounces are built on shaky ground and the consumer sentiment piece from earlier this week.

Levels That Define the Session

Level / Event Value Signal
SPX morning low 7,257 Break below signals index is losing ground to IPO capital rotation; watch for volume spike
SPX 50-day moving avg 7,230 Close below this level is first technically significant deterioration of the week
SPCX first-day close target (bull case) $175+ Validates opening indication; momentum traders likely hold into next week
SPCX caution level $165 Close below New Street target implies early allocation flipping; sector sentiment drags RKLB lower
RKLB Nasdaq-100 passive buy deadline June 22 Mechanical index-fund buying supports RKLB through next Friday; pullbacks are likely shallow until then

Friday’s open is a stress test of a different kind. The S&P 500 has not had to absorb $75 billion in new equity issuance in a single session in its history. Whether the index closes flat, up, or down by less than 1% today would itself be a constructive signal. The levels are clear: 7,257 on the downside, 7,394 for the recovery case. SpaceX at $175 is the event; what it closes at is the story traders will be telling all weekend.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

Emma Davis is co-founder and editor of PreMarket Daily, an independent U.S. financial markets publication delivering daily pre-market equity analysis, earnings coverage, and macroeconomic commentary for...