SpaceX IPO Roadshow Day 3 — Signals Confidence at $135/Share as Investor Demand Surges; Secondary Market Trades $129–$137
By the third day of SpaceX's historic IPO roadshow (June 6, 2026), the company and its underwriting banks signaled strong confidence that the fixed $135/share price would hold — a rare show of certainty for an offering of this scale. According to reporting by Reuters (via Seeking Alpha), investor demand had been robust enough that SpaceX was holding firm at the $135 price rather than adjusting upward or downward. Private secondary markets were trading SpaceX shares in a tight $129–$137 bracket around the offer price, indicating institutional and high-net-worth investors were pricing the deal at or slightly above the offer. Approximately 125 analysts from 21 underwriting banks participated in the roadshow, with a retail investor event planned for June 11 at which ~1,500 participants were expected. Retail investors were allocated approximately 30% of the offering via Fidelity (accounts with $2,000+ minimum), Robinhood, and Charles Schwab. The $75 billion raise — 555.56 million Class A shares at $135 each — targets the largest IPO in stock market history, surpassing Saudi Aramco's 2019 record. Roadshow meetings continued with institutional investors across major financial centers. SpaceX CEO Elon Musk retains approximately 82% voting control via Class B shares (10 votes each), leaving public shareholders with limited governance rights despite holding economic ownership. Pricing is confirmed for June 11 after market close; Nasdaq debut under ticker SPCX is set for June 12, 2026.
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Sources
- T2 Reuters / Seeking Alpha Major western
- T2 CNBC Major western
- T3 Motley Fool Institutional western