In late March 2026, Elon Musk's SpaceX reportedly filed its initial public offering (IPO) application with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). This is not only a milestone in the commercial space industry, but could also become the largest IPO in U.S. history. From reusable rockets to Starlink internet, from space tourism to deep space exploration, SpaceX's listing is redefining the valuation logic and industry landscape of global commercial spaceflight.
*Based on publicly available market information, the final details are subject to the actual issuance.
*Based on publicly available market information, the final details are subject to the actual issuance.
Short answer: it is far more likely an opening chapter than an ending. But it changes how you should think about Rocket Lab. 1) SpaceX S-1 is not bearish for the sector If SpaceX is genuinely moving toward public markets, it does two things immediately: Forces institutional capital to price the entire space economy properly Validates that launch, satellites, and data infrastructure are no longer speculative niches That is typically bullish for listed peers, not destructive. 2) But it is bearish for lazy RKLB theses Let’s be direct. Many RKLB bulls relied on a “next SpaceX proxy” narrative. That breaks the moment SpaceX becomes investable. Capital that chased RKLB for scarcity may rotate. So RKLB must now stand on fundamentals, not comparison. 3) Where RKLB still has a real edge RKLB is not
In the latest week, US-Iran negotiations remained deadlocked. On May 18, Trump said that the military action against Iran originally scheduled for May 19 would be postponed, indicating that the US-Iran standoff did not escalate further this week. At the same time, the US publicly stated that the talks with Iran had made “significant progress,” while also saying that a “Plan B” was already prepared, which suggests that the substantive differences between the two sides have not been resolved. In addition to the ongoing market pricing of disruptions stemming from the Middle East situation, investors are also closely watching the progress of SpaceX, Elon Musk’s space company, which could potentially stage the “largest IPO in history.” As of 3:00 p.m. on May 21, 2026, the weekly performance of
fear of missing out f.o m.o if there was ever a time to get swept up in the psychology trate know as FOMO was ever going to snag someone. The SPACE X IPO is happening next month, and I not normally susceptible to this phenomenon, but I think I won't be able to say that if I do get to by 5 000 USD, probably tt
Hi Tigers🐯, “This may be the IPO that turns space from a dream trade into a benchmark sector.” SpaceX is reportedly targeting a Nasdaq listing as early as June 12, with a potential valuation of around $1.75 trillion, which could make it the biggest IPO in history. The news has already put space-related stocks back on investors’ radar. So the question is simple: If SpaceX(SPCX) becomes the anchor of the space economy, which public space names get repriced first? Let’s dig in. ① The Launch Club The most direct comparison. $Rocket Lab(RKLB)$ $Firefly Aerospace(FLY)$ Translation for us: SpaceX sets the ceiling, but Rocket Lab(RKLB) may become the easiest public-market comparison
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