SpaceX Went From $150 to $225 and Back in Under 2 Weeks -- Here's the Math That Explains Every Dollar of That Move
Written by Justin Pope for The Motley Fool -> SpaceX's current float is less than 5% of total shares. That will grow significantly as SpaceX's staggered lockup expires.
Written by Justin Pope for The Motley Fool -> SpaceX's current float is less than 5% of total shares. That will grow significantly as SpaceX's stagger
Read Full Story at Nasdaq News →Why This Matters
The volatility in SpaceX's share valuation—even within a thinly traded secondary market—reflects deeper investor anxieties about the company’s long-term valuation model. With the impending unlock of nearly 95% of its shares, the price swings underscore how quickly perceptions can shift when liquidity constraints collide with high expectations for space industry disruption.
Background Context
SpaceX’s private market valuation has long operated in a gray zone between speculative enthusiasm and grounded financial engineering, with early investors relying on milestone-based growth narratives. The staggered nature of its lockup agreements was designed to stabilize early valuations, but as those restrictions loosen, the floodgates may expose the fragility of a valuation built more on future promise than current fundamentals.
What Happens Next
As more shares become freely tradable, the market may see a sustained correction unless SpaceX can demonstrate a clear path to profitability in its non-Starlink divisions. Watch for signals from institutional backers on whether they’re holding, selling, or doubling down—each move could amplify volatility in an already thin market.
Bigger Picture
This episode highlights a broader tension in high-growth private ventures: the disconnect between headline valuation and actual liquidity. As more unicorns face similar unlock events, the space economy may have to reconcile whether its valuation structures are sustainable—or if the next correction is already priced in.

