# SpaceX stock price drops again as post-IPO gains for retail investors get nearly wiped out

> Source: <https://www.fastcompany.com/91563529/spacex-stock-price-drop-gains-retail-traders-wiped-out>
> Published: 2026-06-23 12:35:00+00:00

Shares of Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (Nasdaq: SPCX), better known as SpaceX, are having a bad week so far.

On Monday, the stock price for the space and [AI](https://www.fastcompany.com/section/artificial-intelligence) company crashed by more than 16%.

That decline followed drops of around 3.6% and 5% last Wednesday and Thursday, respectively. (Markets were closed on Friday for the Juneteenth holiday.)

And in premarket trading this morning, the company’s shares fell below a threshold that no investor wants to see. Here’s what you need to know.

In premarket trading on Tuesday, SpaceX shares dipped 4%, putting the company’s share price at just above $148.16.

Not only is that more than $75 lower than its all-time high share price of $225.64 just one week ago, but it also means that retail investors who got in on the ground floor of SPCX on its first day of trading could lose money on their investment (on paper, at least).

To recap: Before its debut on the Nasdaq exchange earlier this month, SpaceX priced its shares at $135 each for its initial public offering.

This is the price at which institutional investors and other insiders were able to buy the shares before they began trading in the public markets. SpaceX also reportedly [allocated 20%](https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/spacex-ipo-stock-market-06-12-2026/card/nUeVuopv0uEZlnhNGtAl) of its IPO shares to retail investors, a high percentage though apparently [not enough](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/15/spacex-ipo-leaves-retail-investors-with-too-few-shares-and-a-tough-hold-or-sell-decision.html) to meet demand.

By selling its shares for $135 apiece, SpaceX raised $75 billion in its IPO—the most money ever raised in an initial public offering.

But retail investors who needed to wait until the stock opened on June 12—its [first day of trading](https://www.fastcompany.com/91558281/spacex-ipo-today-spcx-401k-retirement-accounts-volatile-trading-why-investors-worry) on public markets—weren’t able to snap up SPCX shares for $135 each.

By the time SPCX shares hit the market, pent-up demand had pushed the share price to $150.

This price, known as the opening price, is the lowest price that many investors ever paid for SPCX shares. The stock rose even higher as the trading day proceeded.

But in premarket trading this morning, shares dipped below their $150 opening price, which is not a good sign.

As of this writing, the picture had improved slightly, which the stock hovering around $153 a share.

While retail investors who bought the stock at its opening price or higher are on the verge of seeing their gains wiped out, two other groups of investors are still seeing potential profits on their holdings.

Even though SPCX shares dipped to $148 in premarket this morning, that’s still more than $13 above what the company’s institutional IPO investors originally paid ($135 per share).

And, of course, SpaceX’s early-stage investors and employees who acquired stock options over the company’s 20-plus-year history have still massively benefited on paper.

Indeed, SpaceX’s IPO is believed to have minted more than [4,000 new millionaires](https://www.fastcompany.com/91559698/spacex-ipo-retail-investors-robinhood-openai-anthropic), most of whom had held shares in the company for years before it went public.

Still, it’s worth emphasizing that any gains or losses investors of all stripes are experiencing with their SpaceX shares are only on paper until they sell the shares.

And while retail and IPO investors can do so at any time, pre-IPO investors are subject to a lockup period, during which they are prevented from selling their shares for a set amount of time.

Many worry the end of that lockup period could cause trouble for the stock as well.

When a company’s shares go public, early pre-IPO investors are typically barred from selling their shares for a set period.

This is done primarily to protect the company’s share price from plummeting right out of the gate. It also helps instill confidence in retail investors that they aren’t buying into an asset that long-term investors may suddenly flee.

Most lockup periods last for about six months. But SpaceX’s lockup is different. Its lockup period [expires on a rolling basis](https://www.barrons.com/articles/spacex-stock-price-investor-lockups-37a3ea6a), meaning pre-IPO investors can begin selling a portion of their holdings before the usual six-month limit.

It should be noted, however, that SpaceX’s largest shareholder, Musk, is barred from selling any of his SPCX shares until June 13, 2027.

Regardless, many analysts and financial experts are cautioning retail investors to beware. Once SpaceX’s lockup periods expire, the company’s employees and other pre-IPO investors can begin cashing out their shares, which may create a glut of supply in the market, sending SPCX shares significantly lower.

But just how much SpaceX’s upcoming launch operations affect the share price, of course, remains to be seen.
