SpaceX already nailed its first test stock market test.
The tough question is whether investors can detach the stock from the company.
Elon Musk’s rocket, satellite, and artificial intelligence company has become one of the most controversial new listings on the market after a record-breaking initial public offering and rapid ascent. The company’s story is huge. Its valuation may be even bigger.
That’s why Michael Burry’s warning of late has such weight. Not only is SpaceX (SPCX) overpriced, he says, but the bearish trade may also be as dangerous as the bullish transaction.
“I am not involved with SpaceX now. Neither short nor, ahem, long,” Burry wrote, according to Fortune.
SpaceX is no longer just a rocket story
The secret message in Burry’s SpaceX comments isn’t that a famous skeptic believes a hot stock seems expensive.
The more useful investing conclusion is that SpaceX has quickly become a market structure tale. The stock is locked between two forces that can punish retail investors: a value that may already be priced in years of faultless execution and a fan-driven trading setup that can make shorting the company excruciatingly expensive.
Related: SpaceX stock joins AI bond frenzy
That makes this case different from a normal IPO argument. SpaceX is not being valued as a launch company. And investors are baking in Starlink, government contracts, satellite broadband, defense work, AI infrastructure, Musk’s brand, and long-term goals that reach far beyond Earth.
That is a powerful compilation of stories. It’s also hard to put a price on.
SpaceX’s IPO was priced at $135 a share, Reuters indicated, raising $75 billion from the sale of 555.56 million shares and valuing the corporation at $1.77 trillion. The IPO made SpaceX the biggest in U.S. history.
Even before investors had a long public earnings call history, segment margins, or quarterly cash-flow performance to assess, SpaceX was one of the most valuable corporations in the market. SpaceX might even be one of the greatest publicly traded corporations in history.
But even well-regarded companies can be difficult investments when the stock price asks investors to pay up front for a future that’s still years away.
Burry skeptical of SpaceX valuation, recommends restraint
Burry’s statement heightens that tension because he did something more interesting than merely criticize SpaceX.
He declined to act on the trade.
Burry also released details on SpaceX put options that would let investors to bet against the shares. He was “tempted” but finally declined, he claimed.
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