SpaceX has filed its IPO prospectus, targeting a Nasdaq listing under the ticker symbol SPCX with a valuation floor of $1.8 trillion and a capital raise of $75 billion, which would make it the “largest” public offering in history.
And while it’s a seismic moment for the space industry, for those holding Virgin Galactic (SPCE) shares, what’s more important is analyzing what happens to the smaller, scrappier player once the giant enters the room.
SpaceX IPO is lifting Virgin Galactic stock – for now
Here’s a dynamic that Wall Street rarely spells out plainly: when a sector titan goes public, smaller players in that space all see their stock prices rise in anticipation.
That is exactly what’s been happening to SPCE shares in recent sessions.
Since SpaceX is not yet listed, investors have been buying liquid proxy names, including Intuitive Machines, Rocket Lab, and Virgin Galactic.
At the time of writing, SPCE is up more than 150% versus its year-to-date low, on the back of the SpaceX IPO halo effect and settlement of two longstanding shareholder derivative lawsuits.
Simply put, the momentum is genuine – but it may be on borrowed time.
What happens to SPCE shares once SpaceX goes live
Interestingly, the very catalyst that’s boosted Virgin Galactic stock in recent sessions could become its biggest headwind by late June.
Once SpaceX lists, capital will likely rotate out of proxy names like SPCE and directly into SpaceX – meaning the IPO halo would eventually become a bearish catalyst.
The fundamentals make this rotation risk even sharper.
Starlink, the giant’s satellite internet unit, now serves 10.3 million users across 164 countries, generates $3.26 billion per quarter in revenue, and throws off $1.19 billion in operating profit every three months.
That is the kind of scale and profitability that Virgin Galactic simply can’t match.
SPCE posted a $65 million net loss for Q1 and is still gearing up for flight testing of its new Delta-class spaceship in the third quarter, with roughly 650 ticket reservations on the books.
When investors can choose between a $1.8 trillion revenue-generating rocket company and a pre-sales space tourism startup still assembling its first next-gen vehicle, the calculus isn’t particularly close.
How to play Virgin Galactic heading into SpaceX IPO
Virgin Galactic is a pre-revenue, high-burn aerospace firm that carried a going concern disclosure in its 2025 annual report.
That is not a red flag to be brushed past – it is the company itself telling you the risks are existential. Still, there’s a real catalyst on the horizon.
As mentioned earlier, SPCE is set to begin flight testing its first Delta-class spaceship in Q3, with rocket-powered spaceflight targeted for the final quarter.
Tickets are also back on sale at $750,000 per seat.
If the Delta program hits its milestones and the NYSE-listed firm begins generating actual revenue, the thesis changes considerably.
That said, with SpaceX about to absorb enormous institutional capital, SPCE stock faces a “fierce battle” for investor attention.
This is a speculative play for high-risk tolerant investors only – not a conviction buy for the cautious.
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