SpaceX broke below its $135 IPO price for the first time on July 15, 2026, sliding as much as 2.9% to about $132.15. For a stock that surged nearly 50% in its first three days of trading, this is the moment the story meets gravity.
By Ruslan Averin.
This is Ruslan Averin's SpaceX stock analysis — a textbook lesson in new-listing hype.
The round trip
The arc since the June debut has been violent in both directions.
| Phase | Move |
|---|---|
| First three days | ~+50% |
| Next three sessions | ~−25% |
| July 15 | Below IPO price, ~$132.15 |
| Off post-IPO high | roughly −34% |
Up half, then down a quarter, then through the offering price — all in a few weeks.
Why IPO hype fades
A hot IPO prices in a story, not a business. In the first days, scarcity and enthusiasm do the work: limited float, momentum buyers, and a narrative too exciting to value carefully. But the float grows, the momentum crowd rotates to the next new thing, and eventually the market has to answer the boring question — what is this actually worth? When it does, the hype premium comes out. Breaking the IPO price is the psychological marker of that reckoning: everyone who bought the story is now underwater, and the stock has to earn its next move on fundamentals rather than fervor.
My read
None of this says anything about SpaceX the enterprise — it says a great deal about how new listings trade. The company can be extraordinary and the stock can still be mispriced on day three. I never chase a debut in its first frantic sessions; the price discovery is a casino until the float settles and the story premium bleeds out. This is that process happening in real time. The interesting analysis starts now, below the IPO price, where the business finally has to carry the valuation.
Bottom line
A 50% pop that round-trips below the IPO price in weeks is the hype premium unwinding — the real valuation debate begins here. I do not hold the shares and am not telling anyone to buy or sell — this is analysis, not advice.
