SpaceX Drops 8% as the Post-IPO Cooldown Deepens: Profit-Taking or Fading Hype?

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By David Moadel Updated Published

Quick Read

  • SPCX fell 8% Thursday after a huge post-IPO surge and Wednesday's drawdown, with the Fed's rate hold and Fed Chair Warsh's remarks likely accelerating the pullback.

  • SpaceX briefly surpassed both Amazon and Microsoft in market cap this week, becoming the fifth-largest U.S. company by market cap at $1.36 trillion despite Thursday's decline.

  • Arete initiated SPCX stock with an ambitious $401 price target and a Buy rating even as the stock remains highly volatile.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and SpaceX didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

SpaceX Drops 8% as the Post-IPO Cooldown Deepens: Profit-Taking or Fading Hype?

© courtesy of SpaceX

SpaceX (NASDAQ:SPCX) stock is down 8% on Thursday, June 18, sliding to $176 a day after the Federal Reserve’s latest policy decision. The pullback broke a three-day winning streak, the first losing session since the company’s IPO on June 12.

SPCX stock touched a session high of $188.40 and then dropped quickly. That volatility, following a multi-day vertical move, is typical of a young, retail-heavy listing.

SpaceX has been one of the most-watched tickers since its IPO. The stock edged past Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) this week to become the fifth-most-valuable U.S. company by market cap. Furthermore, SpaceX’s market capitalization briefly topped Microsoft‘s (NASDAQ:MSFT) during Tuesday’s session, making it momentarily more valuable than the software giant. SpaceX’s market cap sits at around $1.36 trillion despite today’s pullback, underscoring how quickly the name has become a top-tier index constituent.

Fed Decision and Profit-Taking Accelerate the Pullback

One interpretation of what’s happening now in SPCX stock is that it extended its losses after the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged. On Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh’s press conference weighed on broader market sentiment. Today’s move in SpaceX stock largely appears to be a macro and profit-taking response, not a company-specific concern.

The broader tape supports that view. The S&P 500 ETF is up 1% on the session even as growth-name volatility picks up post-Warsh, suggesting capital is rotating rather than fleeing. SpaceX stock, as a freshly listed momentum favorite, simply has more air to give back when money flows back into more established S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 stocks.

The profit-taking math makes sense. SPCX stock jumped 19% from its $160.95 close on June 12 to $191.82 at Wednesday’s close, with three straight green sessions fueling the run. Sellers booking that gain in four trading days doesn’t require a fundamental thesis change on SpaceX.

SPCX stock opened for public trading at $160.95 on June 12 and never closed lower in any of the following three sessions, marking a near-flawless post-IPO start that few listings deliver. Pullbacks after that magnitude of strength aren’t all that unusual.

Arete’s Street-High $401 Target Lands the Same Morning

Even as SpaceX shares fell, the bull case picked up a fresh endorsement. Specifically, Arete initiated coverage of SpaceX stock with a Buy rating and a Street-high $401 price target. The firm asserted that SpaceX is “breaking hard engineering challenges into stepwise tasks” as it builds hardware and software across space, connectivity, and artificial intelligence.

The Arete call cuts against the daily price action and gives the long thesis institutional representation. The consensus analyst target on SPCX stock currently sits at $164, which implies downside from today’s levels, so the $401 outlier widens the dispersion meaningfully. Investors digesting today’s drop now face both extremes.

Retail enthusiasm has defined the SPCX story. Per Vanda Research, SpaceX has been the most-bought stock by retail investors for three consecutive sessions since its debut and is “starting to trade like a ‘Magnificent Seven’ stock.”

Profit-Taking or Fading Hype? What Investors Can Watch

The question of profit-taking versus fading hype remains genuinely open. On the profit-taking side, today’s drop in SpaceX stock tracks yesterday’s broad-based post-Fed pullback, follows a parabolic post-IPO run, and arrives the same morning a sell-side shop puts a Street-high $401 target on the name. That combination reads more like digestion than rejection.

On the skeptical side, SpaceX is a brand-new, retail-driven listing that isn’t yet profitable and trades at a rich valuation after a vertical week. Reddit sentiment around SPCX has cooled sharply, with the WallStreetBets crowd shifting from “free money” posts to skeptical threads about institutional demand and lock-up sell pressure. A composite prediction-market and social-sentiment read on SPCX stock currently sits at 37, leaning bearish.

SpaceX stock’s trading pattern over the next several sessions could clarify the question. Stabilization on lighter volume near IPO levels would look like classic profit-taking around a hot listing. Deepening pressure alongside falling retail flows or lock-up chatter would give the fading hype thesis more weight.

Investors can watch for whether SPCX stock can regain and hold $180, how the broader tech tape behaves once Warsh’s remarks fully digest, and whether other analysts follow Arete with new coverage. Given the volatility and lack of profitability around this brand-new listing, investors may want to keep their position sizing modest while the volatility surrounding SpaceX stock settles.

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About the Author David Moadel →

David Moadel is financial writer specializing in stocks, ETFs, options, precious metals, and Bitcoin. David has written well over 1,000 articles for leading online publications, helping investors understand markets, income strategies, and risk.

His work has appeared in The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, U.S. News & World Report, TipRanks, ValueWalk, Benzinga, Market Realist, TalkMarkets, Finmasters, 24/7 Wall St., and others.

With a master’s degree in education, David has taught at the elementary, high school, and college levels. That teaching background shapes his writing style: clear, educational, and practical. David has also built a loyal social-media audience by providing trustworthy financial content on YouTube, X/Twitter, and StockTwits.

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