SpaceX shares fell 16% on Monday, closing at $154.60 under ticker SPCX and marking the third consecutive decline since its public-market debut. The drop followed the company's disclosure of plans for a senior unsecured bond offering, with proceeds expected to help repay bridge financing and support general corporate purposes. The stock now trades below its first-day closing price and about 30% below last week's peak, reversing an initial rally that briefly lifted the company's market value toward $3 trillion after its IPO priced at $135 per share with a valuation of roughly $1.77 trillion.
SpaceX disclosed plans for a senior unsecured bond offering on Monday, with proceeds expected to help repay bridge financing and support general corporate purposes. Reports said the company may raise billions of dollars through debt markets. The announcement came as investor scrutiny increased over capital needs tied to Starlink, launch operations, artificial intelligence infrastructure and other long-term projects.
The IPO priced SpaceX at $135 per share, giving the company a valuation of roughly $1.77 trillion. Shares climbed quickly in early trading, briefly lifting the company's market value toward $3 trillion and placing it among the world's most valuable public companies. At its IPO price, SpaceX was already valued far above most aerospace, telecom and technology peers on traditional revenue and earnings metrics.
SPCX closed at $154.60 on Monday, down about 30% from last week's peak. The stock now trades below its first-day closing price after three consecutive declines. The post-listing rally stretched the company's valuation premium as the stock climbed, with investors effectively pricing in years of rapid execution across satellite broadband, defense, launch services, space infrastructure and new AI-linked opportunities.
SPCX's small float may be amplifying volatility. Newly public companies with limited available shares can move sharply in both directions as retail traders, institutions and index-focused investors compete for exposure. That dynamic helped fuel the early rally.
The weakness in SPCX weighed on broader space-sector sentiment. Other listed space companies, including Rocket Lab, Firefly Aerospace, Redwire and Planet Labs, came under pressure as investors reassessed the sector after SpaceX's sharp reversal. The move suggests that SpaceX's IPO has become a benchmark for risk appetite across commercial space equities.
Early analyst commentary has recognized SpaceX's growth potential, particularly through Starlink, but has also pointed to a valuation that already reflects much of the company's upside. SpaceX's financial profile remains complex, with Starlink widely viewed as the company's most commercially mature business, while launch operations, Starship development, defense programs and future space-based infrastructure require heavy investment.
What did SpaceX disclose on Monday that affected SPCX stock?
SpaceX disclosed plans for a senior unsecured bond offering on Monday, with proceeds expected to help repay bridge financing and support general corporate purposes. Reports said the company may raise billions of dollars through debt markets, adding to investor scrutiny over capital needs tied to Starlink, launch operations, artificial intelligence infrastructure and other long-term projects.
How much has SPCX declined since its post-IPO peak?
SPCX closed at $154.60 on Monday, down about 30% from last week's peak. The stock has experienced three consecutive declines and now trades below its first-day closing price, reversing an initial rally that briefly lifted the company's market value toward $3 trillion after its IPO priced at $135 per share with a valuation of roughly $1.77 trillion.
Related News
More than 150 people criticize SpaceX for adding index funds early, forcing linkage to U.S. 401(k) retirement funds
Why is SpaceX down so much? SPCX drops below its IPO first-day closing price, with a $400 billion market value wiped out
SpaceX Stock Drops 16.4% on June 22, Erasing $400B Market Cap
SpaceX market value erodes by $800 billion, its first bond issuance is about $20 billion