Overview:

SPCX hit $160.95 by end of its second trading day, valuing SpaceX at roughly $2.1 trillion despite a 2025 net loss of $4.9 billion and Q1 2026 operating loss of $1.94 billion. The IPO raised $75 billion — more than double Saudi Aramco's 2019 record of $29.4 billion. New Street Research initiated with a Buy and $165 target; CFRA countered with a Sell and $115 target citing a valuation exceeding 100x revenue at an unprofitable company.

NEW YORK — Two days into its public life, SpaceX carries a $2.1 trillion market cap and a $4.9 billion annual net loss — and the debate over which of those numbers matters more is the most consequential valuation argument in markets right now.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this: the IPO pop is real, but the post-lock-up period is where this story gets dangerous. The 19% first-day gain looks compelling until you notice the stock is already 8.8% below its intraday high of $176.52 — that’s a fast 48-hour reversal from peak euphoria. I’m watching $150 closely; that was the opening trade on day one, and a break below it signals that retail momentum is exhausting without institutional follow-through. The contrarian question nobody is asking loudly enough: if Starlink is the profit engine here, why does the company need xAI at all — unless the real plan is to monetize Musk’s AI ambitions on public shareholders’ balance sheet? Watch for any lock-up waiver news. That’s the single catalyst most likely to reset the price floor.

The Moment That Rewrote IPO History

When SpaceX priced at $135 per share on June 11 and raised $75 billion, it didn’t just break a record — it doubled one. Saudi Aramco’s 2019 offering, long considered untouchable at $29.4 billion, is now a footnote. The sheer scale reshuffled the global equity hierarchy in a single session: SpaceX instantly became the sixth-largest publicly traded company in the United States, and Elon Musk crossed the threshold that no individual has ever reached — a net worth exceeding $1 trillion.

For market context, that kind of gravitational pull matters. The SpaceX debut gave broader indices a narrative lift at a moment when sentiment was already fragile. A $75 billion capital raise of this visibility functions as a confidence signal — it tells institutional money that the risk appetite for transformational tech remains intact. Whether the underlying business justifies that confidence is a separate, and more uncomfortable, question.

Shares opened at $150.00 on June 12, ran to an intraday high of $176.52, and by Friday’s close had settled at $160.95 — still up 19.22% from the IPO price, but well off the peak. Volume on day one hit 503.89 million shares. That is not a quiet debut.

Data Visual
SpaceX Segment Revenue vs. Operating Income/Loss (2025, $B)
Shows how Starlink is the only profitable segment, subsidizing deep losses in the AI and Space divisions.
SpaceX Segment Revenue vs. Operating Income/Loss (2025, $B)
Values in $B

Three Businesses, One Price Tag — and Only One Making Money

SpaceX is not one company. It is three businesses bundled into a single ticker, and understanding that structure is the only way to evaluate the valuation honestly.

The Connectivity segment — Starlink — is the crown jewel and the only reason the adjusted EBITDA number is positive. Starlink generated $11.4 billion in revenue in 2025, up 50% year-over-year, with operating income of $4.4 billion — and operating income grew 120% in the year. That is a genuine, large-scale, high-margin subscription business. If Starlink were a standalone public company, the valuation conversation would be straightforward.

The Space segment — launch services, Falcon 9, Starship — generated $4.1 billion in 2025, up only 8% year-over-year, and ran at negative EBITDA. Launch contracts are lumpy, government-dependent, and capital-intensive. This segment is strategic infrastructure, not a growth engine in any near-term financial sense.

Then there is the AI segment — effectively the xAI acquisition folded into the corporate structure. Revenue of $3.2 billion sounds meaningful until you see the operating loss sitting next to it: negative $6.4 billion. SpaceX is spending roughly $2 burning for every $1 earned in this division. Morningstar analyst Nicholas Owens flagged the xAI integration as a “material threat of value destruction” in his pre-IPO assessment — a characterization that deserves more attention than it has received in the post-IPO coverage.

At the consolidated level, SpaceX reported 2025 revenue of $18.67 billion and an operating loss of $2.59 billion. The adjusted EBITDA of $6.58 billion is real, but it is adjusted — and the gap between that figure and the GAAP net loss of $4.9 billion should give any serious investor pause. Q1 2026 accelerated those concerns: revenue came in at $4.69 billion, up 15% year-over-year, but the operating loss widened to $1.94 billion and the net loss hit $4.28 billion — compared to a $528 million net loss in the prior quarter. That sequential deterioration is not a rounding error.

Key Stat
113x 2025 Revenue
At Friday’s close of $160.95, SpaceX trades at over 113 times trailing annual revenue — a multiple that prices in flawless execution across three divisions, one of which is burning $6.4 billion per year.

A Market Finding Its Footing in Expensive Territory

Context matters here. SpaceX did not list into a cheap market. U.S. equities have spent much of 2026 at or near record highs, navigating a complicated macro backdrop that includes sticky inflation, a new Federal Reserve chair, and geopolitical risk that flared sharply before appearing to ease. The IPO week itself unfolded against a 4.2% inflation print, which would normally constrain risk appetite — yet SPCX absorbed $75 billion in new supply without cracking the broader tape.

That resilience says something. It says institutional allocators were willing to underwrite a narrative-driven, pre-profitability mega-cap in an environment where the Fed has been signaling caution. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s policy posture remains a variable, and a hawkish pivot would reprice long-duration growth assets broadly — SPCX, trading on decade-out revenue projections, would be among the most exposed.

The Nasdaq’s appetite for stories like this is not unlimited. Oracle’s recent 11% drop on a record quarter is a useful reminder that even genuine earnings beats can disappoint a market priced for perfection. SpaceX has not yet posted a quarter as a public company that shows GAAP profitability at any level. The first earnings report as a public company will carry weight far beyond any single data point.

Data Visual
SPCX Analyst Price Targets vs. Current Price (June 14, 2026)
Illustrates the extraordinary spread in analyst views — from a $63 floor to a $330 bull case — relative to Friday’s close of $160.95.
SPCX Analyst Price Targets vs. Current Price (June 14, 2026)
Values in $

Why the Analysts Cannot Agree on Anything

Five analysts have initiated coverage. The consensus is technically “Buy” — four buys, one sell — but the price target distribution is so wide it barely functions as a consensus at all.

Analyst Note
New Street Research’s Pierre Ferragu initiated with a Buy and $165 target on June 11, projecting $195 billion in revenue by 2030 underpinned by a $650 billion Starlink valuation and $575 billion in AI value — with a bull case reaching $330 per share and a potential $4 trillion market cap over five years. Oppenheimer’s Timothy Horan set a $190 target, calling the IPO “an important moment for the broader tech sector.” CFRA countered with a Sell and $115 target, arguing the stock is overvalued “in almost any scenario” at over 100x revenue for an unprofitable business. Morningstar pegged fair value at roughly $780 billion implied — 48% below the IPO valuation — with analyst Nicholas Owens specifically flagging the xAI acquisition as a structural risk.

The average 12-month price target of $164 implies just 1.9% upside from Friday’s close — which is a sobering data point for anyone buying the stock today based on sell-side enthusiasm. The high target of $227 implies 41% upside; the low of $63 implies 61% downside. When the range of informed professional opinion spans nearly $165 per share on a stock trading at $161, that is not analysis — it is a Rorschach test for your risk tolerance.

The bull case rests on two assumptions that cannot both be simultaneously wrong: that Starlink continues compounding at 40-50% annually, and that the AI segment eventually justifies its $6.4 billion annual burn rate. Break either assumption, and the path to $227 closes fast. The bear case does not require a disaster — it only requires that the market eventually demands a line-of-sight to GAAP profitability that SpaceX cannot yet provide.

The Levels and Catalysts That Define the Next Move

SPCX is now a $2.1 trillion market cap stock with two days of price history, no earnings track record as a public company, and a lock-up period that will eventually release a substantial share count into the market. The near-term trading range is being established in real time, which makes the technical levels from the IPO week unusually important as reference points.

The stock’s behavior around the $150 opening print — essentially the first price that cleared the market in normal trading — will be the most watched level in the weeks ahead. A sustained hold above it signals that IPO buyers are not rushing for the exit. A break below it triggers a very different conversation about where fundamental support actually lies — and the nearest credible answer from the analyst community is $115 to $135.

What could change the thesis in either direction? On the upside: a Q2 2026 earnings report showing Starlink subscriber growth acceleration, any narrowing of the xAI operating loss, or a major government contract announcement for Starship. On the downside: a Falcon 9 anomaly, regulatory action on Starlink’s spectrum position, or any signal that the xAI integration is consuming more capital than the S-1 disclosed. The broader market’s ability to absorb this new supply remains an open question as well.

Level / Event Value Signal
IPO-day intraday high $176.52 Reclaiming this level would signal renewed institutional buying and could open a run toward the $190 Oppenheimer target.
Friday close / current price $160.95 Near-term anchor; holds above average analyst target of $164 — but only barely. Momentum stalls here without a fresh catalyst.
IPO opening print $150.00 Key support. A close below this level signals IPO-day buyers are exiting and shifts near-term momentum bearish.
IPO price / 52-week low $135.00 Hard floor in the near term — a break here would be a major negative signal and likely trigger the CFRA $115 target conversation.
First public earnings report Q2 2026 The single most important binary event. Any GAAP profitability improvement — or further widening of xAI losses — resets the entire valuation debate.

SpaceX is the most consequential new public company in a generation. That is not hyperbole — the scale of the IPO, the breadth of the business, and the trajectory of Starlink’s growth are all legitimate reasons for serious investors to pay attention. But at 113 times trailing revenue, with a net loss accelerating in Q1 2026 and an AI division burning capital at a rate that would concern any CFO, the stock is pricing in a version of the future that has very little margin for error. The first test of whether that future arrives on schedule will come with the Q2 earnings report. Until then, the most honest thing anyone can say about SPCX is that the range of reasonable outcomes — from $63 to $330 — tells you everything about the uncertainty embedded in every dollar of that $2.1 trillion market cap.


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.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...