Five ways Elon Musk's SpaceX upended Wall Street's IPO playbook - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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Five ways Elon Musk's SpaceX upended Wall Street's IPO playbook

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on June 8, 2026

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· Last updated: June 8, 2026

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Five Ways SpaceX is Redefining Wall Street's IPO Playbook Under Elon Musk

By Manya Saini

June 8 (Reuters) - Elon Musk is bringing his pioneering business style to the IPO world this week when his rocket and satellite maker SpaceX goes public, in ways that no other company has.

Here is how SpaceX is breaking Wall Street traditions with its record $75 billion listing.

How SpaceX is Transforming the IPO Landscape

1. 'Take-It-Or-Leave-It' Stock Pricing

Unconventional Valuation Approach

SpaceX is targeting a roughly $1.8 trillion valuation and the price of $135 per share is not up for discussion! SpaceX set the price before meetings with investors at a roadshow, which Wall Street always uses to test demand and set a price range. 

Departure from Traditional Roadshows

"This is a real break from the normal IPO process, as typically the price range gives investors a starting point and lets the company adjust based on feedback during the roadshow," said Matt Kennedy, senior ‍strategist at Renaissance Capital, a provider of IPO-focused research and ETFs.

"Starting with a set price turns the roadshow from a price-discovery exercise into more of a sales process."

It's not clear if Musk will even attend the roadshow in person -- he showed up by video at one of the first events, in a last-minute addition to the agenda, Reuters reported.

Of course, the company's ability to carry out its stock pricing plan depends on demand, and that will be clear when the final IPO price is set on June 11, with trading on Nasdaq starting the next day.

2. Making Room for Main Street

Expanding Access to Retail Investors

SpaceX is changing who gets access to shares, as well as pushing investment banks to lower their IPO fees.

Mom-and-pop retail investors without millions to invest usually do not get much opportunity to buy into an IPO, but SpaceX is considering allocating as much as 30% of the offering to individual investors, Reuters previously reported, an unusually large retail tranche aimed at tapping into Musk's loyal following.

Index Inclusion and Market Impact

"The retail allocation is so massive that they probably think of the mob of individuals out there clamoring for this as a type of safety net," said Brian Jacobsen, chief economic strategist at Annex Wealth Management.

Nasdaq index rules were changed in a way that could allow SpaceX to quickly join the Nasdaq 100, which would require many funds and investors that track the index to buy shares.

However, the high-profile S&P 500 will remain closed to SpaceX in the short term after the index group declined to change rules, such as that a company must be profitable. SpaceX is not.

3. Early Exits for Insiders

Flexible Lock-Up Periods

SpaceX employees will be able to sell some of their shares in stages before the usual six-month restriction period ends, according to a filing, a sign that the rocket maker is not too worried about a rush of insider selling that would pressure the stock.

Primary Share Listing and Insider Stakes

The listing will be almost entirely new shares, or primary. Both strategies are unusual but not unprecedented. Musk himself will have to keep stock for about a year.

4. Musk Keeps the Keys

Maintaining Control Post-IPO

Musk is selling shares, but he's not giving up control - not even close to it.

Traditional IPOs can gradually broaden corporate oversight, and while many tech founders wield outsized influence thanks to a special class of super-voting stock, Musk will retain an eye-popping 85.1% of the combined voting power of the company after the IPO, its prospectus shows.

Governance Provisions and Shareholder Rights

That's only the start. Musk cannot be fired as CEO (unless he agrees), and SpaceX has added governance provisions that could make it harder for shareholders to challenge company decisions, including minimum ownership thresholds for certain legal actions and restrictions on shareholder proposals.

5. A Bet on Businesses That Do Not Exist

Speculative Investments and Future Visions

Many investors see SpaceX as a bet on Musk, rather than a specific technology, and they are sold on the man: Reuters reported roughly $150 billion worth of demand for the $75 billion raise.

SpaceX itself has not yet proven that its core businesses will exist. It is loss-making, largely because of massive investments in AI computers, and a key part of its plan is to put solar-powered data centers in space. It has created massive financial incentives for Musk to drive colonization of Mars.

Starlink and the Starship: The Path Forward

Its most profitable unit at the moment is its Starlink satellite internet operation, which is still being built out and testing its market. Moreover, much of SpaceX's future success depends on a massive rocket that is still in testing -- the Starship.

What's not in question is the poetry of its purpose. As the company says, "Our mission is to build the systems and technologies necessary to make life multiplanetary, to understand the true nature of the universe, and to extend the light of consciousness to the stars."

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Henderson)

Key Takeaways

  • Fixed pricing at $135 per share bypasses traditional price‑discovery roadshows, signaling confidence and reframing the marketing as a sales pitch (fortune.com).
  • An estimated 30% of the IPO is earmarked for retail investors—massively above the 5–10% norm—mobilizing Musk’s supporter base as a strategic shareholder bloc (tesorb.com).
  • Elon Musk will retain ~85.1% of voting power via super‑voting shares, ensuring near‑absolute control and limited investor influence even after going public (tradingview.com).

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is unique about SpaceX's stock pricing for its IPO?
SpaceX set a fixed price of $135 per share before investor meetings, breaking from the traditional price discovery process used in Wall Street IPOs.
How is SpaceX involving retail investors in its IPO?
SpaceX is considering allocating up to 30% of its IPO shares to individual investors, a much larger retail allocation than usual.
Will SpaceX employees be able to sell their shares after the IPO?
Yes, SpaceX employees can sell some of their shares in stages before the standard six-month lockup period ends.
How much control will Elon Musk retain after the SpaceX IPO?
Elon Musk will retain about 85.1% of the combined voting power and cannot be fired as CEO unless he agrees.
Is SpaceX currently profitable?
No, SpaceX is not profitable, mainly due to sizable investments in AI and space data centers.

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