SpaceX stock tanks 3%: are investors fleeing after Monday's $400B rout?
AI Sentiment: 22/100 Bearish
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Buy ARK ETFs with SpaceX exposure (ARKK and/or ARKW/ARKQ depending on your mandate). Cathie Wood’s ARK bought the dip, and the article shows sentiment flipped bearish mainly on the bond headline and dilution fears. If the selloff is driven by positioning and narrative rather than fundamentals, ARK’s contrarian bid can keep demand under the stock while the market digests the capital plan.
Key Risk: The market keeps widening the discount because dilution and capital needs keep growing, forcing ARK to sell or underperform as SPCX continues to fall.
Sell short SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX). The bond sale right after a record IPO signals capital intensity and raises the “why debt so soon?” question. With the stock priced for near-flawless execution (very high EV/EBITDA and EV/revenue), any stumble in margins, launch cadence, or AI/space monetization forces a fast multiple reset. The recent 16% one-day drop and continued weakness show the market is repricing risk, not just reacting to headlines.
Key Risk: SpaceX quickly proves the debt and Cursor deal are value-accretive (clear cash-flow path and strong guidance), stopping the multiple compression.
- SpaceX stock remains under pressure after Monday’s 16.4% plunge.
- A fresh bond offering has raised questions after its record IPO.
- Retail sentiment has weakened even as long-term bulls stay engaged.
SpaceX stock NASDAQ:SPCX fell again in premarket trading on Tuesday, extending a sharp post-IPO reversal that has raised some hard questions for investors.
The stock slipped about 3.5% before the open to roughly $149, putting it close to the symbolic $150 level and only about 10% above its $135 IPO price.
Monday’s 16.4% plunge wiped more than $400 billion (approx. AED 1.5 trillion) from SpaceX’s market value, following earlier declines of about 3.6% and 5%.
The shares had briefly touched $225.64 on June 16, making the speed of the reversal hard to ignore.
SpaceX stock: What broke the rally
The immediate trigger was SpaceX’s move into the bond market.
On Monday, the company announced a senior unsecured notes offering, only days after completing the largest initial public offering in US history.
SpaceX raised $85.7 billion (approx. AED 314.8 billion) from its IPO and would use proceeds from the debt sale for general corporate purposes and to repay borrowings under a bridge loan facility.
That may be sensible balance-sheet management, but it landed badly with equity investors.
The concern is simple: why does a company with more than $100 billion (approx. AED 367.3 billion) in cash need to raise debt so soon after a record IPO?
For a stock that had already been priced for near-flawless execution, the bond announcement gave sceptics a fresh reason to question the capital intensity behind Elon Musk’s rockets-to-AI empire.
The pressure is not only from debt. SpaceX’s $60 billion all-stock deal for Cursor has also raised dilution concerns.
Morningstar analyst Nicolas Owens cut his fair value estimate to about $62 a share after the deal, arguing that the market is already assigning enormous value to uncertain future businesses.
Fleeing or buying the dip?
The market reaction is split as Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest treated Monday’s selloff as an opportunity, buying 210,121 SpaceX shares across four ETFs, worth about $32.5 million (approx. AED 119.4 million) at Monday’s closing price, according to Stocktwits data.
That is not panic selling. It is conviction buying.
But the bears have not gone quiet.
Gary Black, managing partner of The Future Fund, said on X that SpaceX remains “hard to justify analytically,” pointing to valuation multiples of roughly 175 times fiscal 2026 EV/EBITDA and 62 times EV/revenue.
He added that the stock has “no room for error,” a phrase that neatly captures the risk of owning a company priced for decades of breakthroughs.
With $SPCX now at $166 (-10% today) and -25% from last week’s 225 peak, it’s hilarious listening to bullish analysts on CNBC and Bloomberg justify their aggressive price targets (WS consensus $235) posted last week. SPCX is uniquely positioned with great ambition but it’s still… pic.twitter.com/CwJ6gx5g1v
— Gary Black (@garyblack00) June 22, 2026
CFRA’s Keith Snyder has also taken a cautious view, initiating coverage with a Sell rating and a $115 price target.
The Wall Street Journal reported that Snyder described the growth assumptions needed to justify even optimistic valuations as “borderline comical.”
Retail sentiment has weakened too, as Stocktwits-linked reports showed sentiment turning bearish from extremely bullish levels as message volumes surged after the bond news.
Yet the same community is not fully giving up. A Stocktwits poll showed 45% of more than 5,600 respondents still named SpaceX as the space stock they were most bullish on for the next five years.
That is the split market in one sentence: institutions like ARK are buying the dip, while retail traders are asking whether the dip is finished.
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