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Beyond launch day: The catalysts traders should watch

June 12 is the opening bell. The real SpaceX trading story begins the morning after when the gap between IPO narrative and fundamental delivery starts to close, one event at a time.

The macro backdrop — Is SpaceX timing this wrong?

There is a question that Wall Street's IPO euphoria has largely smothered, but that serious traders cannot ignore: SpaceX is listing into one of the most hostile macroeconomic backdrops. The timing looks fine on the surface. SpaceX has drawn approximately $250 billion in investor demand, exceeding the $75 billion it is seeking to raise. But one layer below that surface, almost every major macro indicator is flashing amber simultaneously.

1. The Middle East and Oil prices- The military conflict that erupted earlier in 2026 sent oil prices sharply higher and has not fully resolved. A fragile ceasefire is currently holding, but with no guarantee of permanence. For a company operating one of the world's largest rocket launch programmes and burning through significant capital on R&D, sustained elevated energy prices are not a rounding error. They are a direct cost pressure on every launch and a persistent threat to the margin expansion story the bulls are counting on.

2. The Fed is not coming to the rescue - May's nonfarm payrolls came in hotter pushing Treasury yields higher and reinforcing market expectations that the Federal Reserve will remain firmly on hold. When the risk-free rate stays elevated, every dollar of future cash flow that a stock like SpaceX is priced on gets discounted more aggressively.

3. The market top signal nobody wants to say out loud - the simultaneous IPO of SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic within the same calendar year may be a classic late-cycle liquidity event. History is unambiguous on this pattern, the largest, most hyped IPO cohorts tend to cluster near market peaks, not market troughs.

4. The multiplier nobody can ignore - Starlink generates revenue. The AI compute deals generate headlines. But the catalyst that sits at the intersection of all three business segments and whose success or failure touches every line of the S-1 simultaneously, is Starship. SpaceX's bull case not only depends on rockets alone. The Anthropic and Google compute deals already add $26 billion in annualised contracted revenue independent of any rocket. But Starship is the multiplier. A successful commercial debut makes Starlink's V3 deployment faster, makes orbital data centres buildable, and makes the cost structure of every segment cheaper. It does not create the business. It accelerates all of it, simultaneously.

But a stock is not just a business, it is a business plus a price. And the price at which SpaceX is entering the market is the most demanding valuation multiple ever attached to a new listing, in a

macro environment where the primary risk to high-multiple equities, sustained elevated rates combined with geopolitical shock is actively present rather than theoretical.

Can the Hype Eclipse the Pessimism? In the short term, SpaceX shows potential, this is not just a hype play as $250 billion in demand chasing a $75 billion raise means SpaceX opens with mechanical buying pressure that will overwhelm any macro concern on Day 1.

The question is not Day 1. The question is Month 3, Month 6, and Month 12, when the IPO premium fades, the first lock-up tranches begin to unwind, and the stock has to justify its price on fundamentals in real time. That is when the macro backdrop stops being a footnote and starts being the story.

Traders who understand this asymmetry will look for opportunities to position around that transition not against the hype in the opening days, but ahead of the reality check that follows.

Author

Eric Chia

Eric Chia

Exness

MSc in Global Financial Trading BSc in Finance & Economics – Joint program: Taylor’s University + UWE Bristol Developed advanced knowledge in macroeconomics, portfolio management, and asset allocation

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