SpaceX shares fell for a fourth-straight session on Wednesday, dropping below their $135 initial public offering price for the first time ever.
Shares dropped 1.7% to $134, falling below the $135 apiece IPO price and well below the all-time high of $225.64, which propelled the company’s market valuation briefly above those of Silicon Valley giants Microsoft and Amazon .
The decline leaves investors who bought into the company at the IPO price sitting on paper losses for the first time, potentially testing confidence in the stock.
It also offers a reminder that Wall Street enthusiasm can cool quickly, even for a company with the size and scale of SpaceX, which raised around $85.7 billion and fetched a valuation of around $2.1 trillion at the end of its first trading day.
It is not uncommon for a stock to fall below the IPO price, especially during periods of broader market stress.
Wall Street’s main indexes have been under pressure in recent weeks due to uncertainty around the Federal Reserve’s interest rate path and concerns about the durability of the rally powered by AI winners such as chipmakers.
Still, the drop may bolster critics who had argued that SpaceX’s valuation was stretched, as the company was unprofitable and many of its ambitious bets were still untested.
Investors would find better entry points after the first wave of excitement had faded, some analysts had warned before the IPO.
The reversal also underscores the risks of chasing momentum, and the limits of a valuation driven more by narrative than near-term fundamentals.
The stock’s addition to prestigious indexes, such as the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100, did little to reignite the buying. Its shares have dropped nearly 13% since they were included in the Nasdaq 100.
The focus now shifts to the company’s first results after listing. SpaceX has not yet disclosed when it plans to do it, but has said they will be released only through its website and its social media account on X, and not through wire distribution services.
