SpaceX Stock Pullback Erases Most Post-IPO Gains for Average Investor
Auf einen Blick
- SpaceX shares have fallen 20% from their post-IPO high, erasing nearly all gains for the average investor and bringing the stock back to Monday's trading levels.
- The pullback follows a highly anticipated debut that saw the stock surge significantly above its IPO price.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
SpaceX's stock experienced a sharp pullback after its debut, erasing nearly all gains for the average investor and bringing the price back to Monday's levels.
The average investor who bought SpaceX shares in the open market after its debut has seen nearly all of their gains disappear as a sharp pullback erased a large chunk of the stock's post-IPO surge.
Shares of SpaceX fell 6% Thursday to just under $180 a share. The stock's five-day volume-weighted average price, or VWAP, is $179 a share. VWAP measures the average price a security has traded throughout the day, weighted by trading volume and is widely used by traders to gauge investors' positioning.
The move suggests the average post-IPO buyer is now approximately breaking even.
The stock soared from its $135 IPO price to an intraday high above $225 on Tuesday as investors piled into one of the most anticipated public offerings in years. Since then, however, shares have retreated 20%, wiping out much of the gains accumulated after the debut. It's now back to where it was trading on day two, Monday.
The decline has also narrowed the profits for thousands of retail investors who gained access to the IPO through brokerage platforms including Robinhood, Fidelity and SoFi. While many individual investors received only a fraction of the shares they requested — in some cases just one or a handful of shares — those allocations were purchased at the $135 offering price, leaving them with gains even after the recent pullback.
The reversal underscores how quickly sentiment has shifted following the company's blockbuster debut. After briefly pushing SpaceX's market value close to $3 trillion, investors have begun reassessing whether the stock's rapid advance can be justified by fundamentals.
— CNBC's Chris Hayes and Deena Zaidi contributed to the story.
Offene Fragen
- Will fundamentals support current valuation?
- How will sentiment evolve further?
- What is the long-term outlook for SpaceX stock?






