Nasdaq Stock Exchange Listing: One Elon Musk Space X Ticker Symbol ( SPCX ) IPO Shares Price ( $145.00 USD )

Nasdaq Stock Exchange Listing: One Elon Musk Space X Ticker Symbol ( SPCX ) IPO Shares Price ( $145.00 USD )

$145.00 USD
Sale price  $145.00 USD Regular price 
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Nasdaq Stock Exchange Listing: One Elon Musk Space X Ticker Symbol ( SPCX ) IPO Shares Price ( $145.00 USD )

Nasdaq Stock Exchange Listing: One Elon Musk Space X Ticker Symbol ( SPCX ) IPO Shares Price ( $145.00 USD )

$145.00 USD
Sale price  $145.00 USD Regular price 

Nasdaq Stock Exchange Listing: One Elon Musk Space X Ticker Symbol ( SPCX ) IPO Shares Price ( $145.00 USD )

SpaceX has set a fixed IPO share price of $135 per share, preparing to raise roughly $75 billion at an estimated valuation of $1.77 trillion. This record-breaking offering is scheduled to debut on the Nasdaq on June 12, 2026, under the ticker symbol SPCX. [1, 2, 3, 4]

Key IPO Figures
  • Target Share Price: $135.00 USD
  • Target IPO Valuation: $1.77 trillion USD
  • Total Shares Offered: 555.6 million shares (all primary stock, meaning all proceeds go directly to the company)
  • Target Capital Raised: $74.4 billion USD, establishing it as the largest IPO in stock market history
  • Ticker Symbol: Expected to trade under SPCX
  • Listing Date: Set to price on June 11, 2026, with its trading debut scheduled for June 12, 2026, on the Nasdaq. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Prior to this public filing, the company's last major private transaction was a December 2025 tender offer that priced private shares at $421.00 each. The new $135.00 public target price reflects an updated share count following a 5-for-1 stock split approved by shareholders in May 2026 to make the stock more accessible to retail investors. [1, 2]

If you are planning to participate in the debut, I can provide information on which brokerages are offering retail access or details on the dual-class share structure affecting voting power. Let me know how you would like to proceed. [1, 2]
SpaceX operates a fleet of reusable launch vehicles, primarily consisting of the workhorse Falcon 9, the heavy-lift Falcon Heavy, and the massive next-generation Starship megarocket. These rockets support commercial satellite deployment, resupply missions, and NASA's human spaceflight programs. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

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