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SpaceX’s IPO didn’t just light up the charts, it raised a harder question: are you buying a business, or buying belief. We look at the spike after the debut, the slide back toward the offering price, and why that pattern can lure long-term investors into making a short-term decision without a risk plan.
From there, we get practical about fundamentals. We put profitability at the center of the debate, compare SpaceX’s earnings profile to companies like NVIDIA and Microsoft, and ask what it means when a company can trade at a sky-high valuation while still lacking real profits. We also dig into the “dumb money versus smart money” dynamic of IPOs: insiders and early investors finally get liquidity, while the public often shows up with the least access and the most enthusiasm.
The biggest red flags, though, are structural. We talk about Elon Musk’s control, special voting rights, potential cross-company maneuvers, dilution risk, and why a one-person power structure can be dangerous for junior shareholders even if the technology is real. We also cover index inclusion and forced buying through Russell-style products and QQQ exposure, plus the lockup timeline that could change the supply-demand picture fast. If you’re tempted to own SpaceX for the mission, we offer a clear framework for separating inspiration from investability.
Subscribe, share the episode with a skeptical friend, leave a review, and tell us where you land: would you ever buy SpaceX at any price?
Straight Talk for All - Nonsense for None
Please check out our other podcasts:
https://skepticsguidetoinvesting.buzzsprout.com
Disclaimer - These podcasts are not intended as investment advice. Individuals please consult your own investment, tax and legal advisors. They provide these insights for educational purposes only.
By Steve Davenport, Clement MillerPlease text and tell us what you like
SpaceX’s IPO didn’t just light up the charts, it raised a harder question: are you buying a business, or buying belief. We look at the spike after the debut, the slide back toward the offering price, and why that pattern can lure long-term investors into making a short-term decision without a risk plan.
From there, we get practical about fundamentals. We put profitability at the center of the debate, compare SpaceX’s earnings profile to companies like NVIDIA and Microsoft, and ask what it means when a company can trade at a sky-high valuation while still lacking real profits. We also dig into the “dumb money versus smart money” dynamic of IPOs: insiders and early investors finally get liquidity, while the public often shows up with the least access and the most enthusiasm.
The biggest red flags, though, are structural. We talk about Elon Musk’s control, special voting rights, potential cross-company maneuvers, dilution risk, and why a one-person power structure can be dangerous for junior shareholders even if the technology is real. We also cover index inclusion and forced buying through Russell-style products and QQQ exposure, plus the lockup timeline that could change the supply-demand picture fast. If you’re tempted to own SpaceX for the mission, we offer a clear framework for separating inspiration from investability.
Subscribe, share the episode with a skeptical friend, leave a review, and tell us where you land: would you ever buy SpaceX at any price?
Straight Talk for All - Nonsense for None
Please check out our other podcasts:
https://skepticsguidetoinvesting.buzzsprout.com
Disclaimer - These podcasts are not intended as investment advice. Individuals please consult your own investment, tax and legal advisors. They provide these insights for educational purposes only.