SpaceX is trading like a $2T meme stock after its record IPO


SpaceX is trading like a T meme stock after its record IPO


SpaceX’s first week as a public company is starting to look less like a conventional stock-market debut and more like a high-leverage crypto asset.

Shares of Elon Musk-led company, trading under the ticker SPCX, extended their post-IPO rally Tuesday as investors piled into one of the smallest public floats ever attached to a company valued in the trillions of dollars.

The stock rose as much as 13% to $210 in early market trading, according to Yahoo Finance data.

This frenzy has also crossed into digital-asset markets, where SPCX-linked perpetual futures have become one of the busiest contracts across crypto trading platforms.

Tiny float turns demand into momentum

SpaceX’s post-IPO rally has been intensified by the unusually small amount of stock available for public trading.

The company sold 555.6 million shares in its IPO, raising $75 billion. The sale later expanded to 638.9 million shares and about $85.7 billion in proceeds after underwriters exercised their overallotment option.

Even after the additional shares, only a narrow slice of SpaceX’s equity entered the public market. This is because the company has about 13 billion shares outstanding, meaning the IPO released only a small portion of its total stock.

Thus, Musk and other insiders still control most of the company, while lockup agreements limit how much additional supply can reach the market in the near term.

Thierry Borgeat, co-founder of Arvy, said that structure created an exceptionally tight supply setup for a company of SpaceX’s scale, with index funds, retail traders, and momentum buyers all chasing a limited number of tradeable shares.

Crypto analyst Colin Talks Crypto drew a similar comparison to digital-asset markets, arguing that SPCX is behaving like a token with a heavily restricted release schedule.

He said the small liquid float can help drive sharp early gains, but warned that later unlocks could create sell pressure as more shares become available for trading.

SpaceX Share
SpaceX Share Unlock (Source: Colin Talks Crypto)

That imbalance has made each wave of demand more powerful. With few natural sellers on the other side, buying from retail investors, index-linked funds, and speculative traders can move the stock sharply higher.

CNBC’s Jim Cramer pointed this out, saying the stock was behaving like a meme stock because it had “no sellers.”

As a result, the pressure has helped SpaceX climb more than 50% from its $135 IPO price just days after its record listing.

Crypto platforms turn the rally into a leverage trade

The same supply pressure that has driven SpaceX higher in the stock market has spilled into crypto derivatives, where traders are using leveraged contracts to chase the rally around the clock.

SPCX traded at $222.52 over the past 24 hours, up $48.12, or 27.6%, according to CoinGlass data. Futures volume jumped 501.5% to nearly $9 billion, while open interest climbed to $813 million, signaling a sharp increase in both trading activity and capital committed to the market.

These contracts give traders synthetic exposure to SpaceX’s share price through a crypto-native product that trades continuously and allows leverage. That structure has turned the post-IPO rally into a 24-hour speculation cycle, extending the stock-market frenzy beyond regular trading hours.

For a stock such as SpaceX, where public supply is limited, and social media is helping shape the narrative in real time, that kind of market can intensify price swings.

The leverage has already forced a sharp unwind. CoinGlass data showed more than $30 million in SPCX positions liquidated over 24 hours as price volatility exceeded 35%. Short liquidations accounted for about $19 million of that total, compared with roughly $12 million in long liquidations.

SpaceX LiquidationSpaceX Liquidation
SpaceX Liquidation (Source: CoinGlass)

That liquidation profile shows how the rally has fed on itself. When short sellers are forced out, exchanges automatically buy back exposure to close their positions.

That buying can push prices higher, forcing more bearish traders to exit. The same mechanic has fueled violent rallies in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and smaller tokens during crowded positioning events.

For SpaceX, the loop is now clear. A thin public float drives the stock higher. The rising share price pulls more traders into perpetual futures. Short liquidations add more forced buying. The derivative market then reinforces the perception that the rally still has momentum.

Together, those markets have transformed SpaceX’s first week as a public company into a cross-asset momentum trade.

An AI deal gives SPCX’s rally a new catalyst

The rally gained another narrative boost after SpaceX announced an agreement to acquire Anysphere, the software company behind the AI coding tool Cursor, for $60 billion. The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026.

The firm stated:

SpaceX has exercised the option to acquire Cursor in an all-stock transaction with the goal of building the world’s most useful AI models. For the past few months, SpaceXAI has been jointly training a model with Cursor, which will be released in Cursor and Grok Build soon.”

Quinn Thompson, chief investment officer of Lekker Capital, described the deal as a clever use of SpaceX’s newly elevated equity value.

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