By Thursday night, the number was already set. SpaceX locked in its share price at $135 ahead of its highly anticipated debut on the Nasdaq on Friday, June 12, closing out a process that looked almost nothing like a conventional initial public offering. For a company that has spent years redefining what is possible in aerospace, doing things the traditional way was never really on the table.
The final pricing was less a decision and more a formality. SpaceX had announced the $135 figure weeks earlier, before its investor roadshow even began, removing the back-and-forth negotiation that typically defines the final hours before a major listing.
How a traditional IPO usually works
In a standard offering, a company and its underwriters spend the roadshow period gauging investor appetite. They collect orders, weigh demand, and then land on a final price the night before trading begins, often adjusting up or down from the initial range depending on how enthusiastic the market turns out to be.
SpaceX did none of that. The price was fixed before the roadshow started, which meant Thursday’s announcement served mainly to confirm what had already been decided. It is an approach that reflects the broader temperament of the company and its chief executive, who has built a reputation on bypassing conventions that others treat as mandatory.
SpaceX IPO numbers that are hard to fully grasp
At $135 per share, the offering is structured to raise approximately $75 billion, with the company planning to sell around 555 million shares. Underwriters also hold an option to release an additional 83 million shares, worth roughly $11 billion, if demand exceeds the initial supply. The anticipated market capitalization heading into Friday sits near $1.78 trillion, a figure that would make SpaceX one of the most valuable publicly traded companies on earth from the moment trading opens.
Orders reportedly closed a day earlier than is typical, giving the company and its banking partners extra time to determine which investors would receive allocations in what is shaping up to be the largest IPO in history.
Retail investors get a rare seat at the table
One of the more unusual features of this offering is the degree to which everyday investors were invited to participate. SpaceX reportedly targeted a retail allocation of around 30 percent of available shares, a figure dramatically higher than the five to ten percent that most large offerings reserve for individual buyers.
Orders were accepted through a range of brokerage platforms, giving retail participants access that is rarely extended at this scale. Whether that 30 percent target holds in the final allocation remains to be seen, but the intent signals something deliberate about how SpaceX chose to structure who gets in on the ground floor.
Oversubscribed but with caveats
Demand for shares reportedly came in at roughly four times the available supply, a level that signals strong investor interest heading into the debut. That said, oversubscription figures in large IPOs are often inflated. Institutional investors routinely place larger orders than they expect to receive, knowing they will be scaled back, which means the real level of demand is typically lower than the headline number suggests.
What Friday morning actually means
The opening of trading on Friday is where the story shifts from SpaceX’s hands to the market’s. Nasdaq’s systems will begin matching buyers and sellers to find an opening price, a process that for a listing this size and this watched could extend well past the first bell of the session.
Where the stock opens relative to $135 and where it closes by the end of the day will serve as the market’s first real verdict on whether the offering was priced correctly. After years as the world’s most valuable private company, SpaceX will no longer control what its shares are worth.

