SpaceX begins trading today: what do experts make of it?

SpaceX begins trading today: what do experts make of it?
Invezz Team
12 Jun 2026, 14:35 PM

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Starlink cashflow (LMT) long

Buy Lockheed Martin (LMT) as a cleaner way to own the defense/space spend tailwind without paying the SpaceX IPO premium. SpaceX’s government and defense contracts plus Starlink’s critical-infrastructure role point to sustained budgets; LMT is positioned to capture that demand with steadier economics than a Musk-controlled, valuation-heavy IPO.

Key Risk: Defense spending slows or contract wins shift away from LMT, cutting expected earnings momentum.

SpaceX (SPX) short

Sell/short SpaceX shares on day-1/early weakness. The IPO values it at ~$1.75T versus Morningstar’s ~$780B fair value, with the gap largely tied to xAI (valued ~$250B when folded in) that still shows heavy losses and an “indeterminate” moat. Lock-ups may delay selling pressure, but that’s exactly why the first pop can be the best short entry if the market starts questioning the premium.

Key Risk: xAI and Starlink growth re-rate the whole company fast enough to justify the IPO valuation, turning the premium into a new baseline.

  • Zero Sum podcast explores risks and opportunities in SpaceX shares.
  • Analysts question whether SpaceX deserves its $1.75 trillion valuation.
  • Starlink strength and Musk's control dominate the IPO discussion.

SpaceX shares begin trading today, June 12, a day after the company priced its initial public offering, in what is set to become one of the largest stock market debuts in history.

The Elon Musk-led company is looking to raise $75 billion in the offering, valuing the business at $1.75 trillion — a figure that would place it among the seven most valuable companies in the US, just ahead of Tesla.

The IPO opened roughly 30% of the float to retail investors, while existing shareholders face lock-up restrictions expected to limit selling pressure in the early sessions.

Analysts widely expect the stock to see a sharp initial rally, a pattern common to large, high-profile listings, though sustaining that price has historically proven difficult for similarly hyped debuts.

The listing caps a dramatic transformation for SpaceX, a company that began as a rocket maker known for its early, very public launch failures and has since grown into a business spanning satellite internet, defence contracts, and now an IPO that has captivated markets far beyond the aerospace sector.

Analysts question the price tag

Not everyone is convinced the valuation holds up.

Speaking on the Zero Sum podcast from Invezz, David Morrison, Senior Market Analyst at Trade Nation, argued that investors are paying a steep premium.

"I think it's overvalued... I think you're paying too much on the opening basis," he said.

Morrison referenced Morningstar's assessment, which put SpaceX's fair value at around $780 billion — roughly half the IPO price — with much of the gap attributed to the valuation assigned to xAI, Musk's artificial intelligence venture, which was valued at just $250 billion when it was folded into SpaceX not long ago.

Investors are buying into a Musk-controlled structure

The offering structure has also drawn scrutiny.

Musk will retain 42% of equity alongside Class B super-voting shares, giving him 85% of total voting power — a level of control Morrison said leaves little room for shareholder influence.

"It's an impossibility. It's his company now," he said, though he noted similar structures have been used by Meta, Alphabet, and Snap at the time of their listings.

Much of SpaceX's commercial strength comes from Starlink, its satellite internet division, which served over 9 million users and generated $15-16 billion in revenue last year with $4.4 billion in operating income.

By contrast, xAI generated $818 million in revenue in the first quarter of 2026 but posted losses of nearly $2.5 billion in the same period — losses Morningstar has described as carrying an "indeterminate" economic moat.

Wider implications for markets

The IPO has also raised questions about the blending of commercial markets with national security interests, given SpaceX's extensive government and defense contracts alongside Starlink's growing role in critical infrastructure, including aviation connectivity.

SpaceX's debut comes against a broader market backdrop that Morrison flagged as worth watching, pointing to a strengthening US dollar and what he sees as overvalued US tech stocks heading into the second half of the year.

For a deeper breakdown of the IPO structure, the bull and bear cases, and what it could mean for retail investors, watch the full episode of Zero Sum, available now on YouTube and Spotify.