SpaceX priced its initial public offering at a post-money valuation of $150 billion, with Charles Schwab, Fidelity Investments, Robinhood, SoFi, and Morgan Stanley's E-Trade confirming retail allocation access before traditional institutional book-building closed. The structure bypasses the usual bulge-bracket priority ladder, where retail investors receive scraps after hedge funds and sovereign wealth vehicles take first look. Musk retained 53.8% voting control through a dual-class share structure that grants 10-to-1 voting rights on founder-held B shares, a mechanism that survived SEC comment periods despite pressure from governance advisory firms.
The offering allocated 22% of available float to retail platforms, a figure 4.7 times higher than the 4.7% median for technology IPOs over $50 billion since 2019. Schwab committed to fill 100% of qualified client orders up to 500 shares per account, while Robinhood implemented a lottery system weighted by account tenure and prior trading volume. Fidelity restricted access to accounts holding $25,000 minimum balances, a threshold that still admits 68% of its active brokerage base. The pricing came in at $56 per share, the midpoint of the $50–$62 range filed in April, suggesting Musk resisted banker pressure to stretch valuation into the $175–$200 billion zone that Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley reportedly advocated during roadshow negotiations.
The capital-markets implication is immediate: if SpaceX's structure holds through the first 90 days without triggering class-action lockup complaints, the template becomes available to every late-stage unicorn weighing direct listings versus traditional syndication. Robinhood's retail allocation represents 8.3% of total float, a figure that would have required $12.45 billion in aggregate demand if the platform honored all requests at full size. That demand signal moves pricing power away from institutional anchors, who historically set the clearing price in exchange for lockup commitments and price-support agreements during the first 30 days of trading. The governance structure—10-to-1 voting on 53.8% of equity—means Musk can unilaterally block acquisition offers, board changes, or capital restructurings even if 95% of economic shareholders oppose him. That concentration survived Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis objections, both of which recommended against dual-class structures exceeding 5-to-1 ratios in their 2024 proxy voting guidelines.
Allocators should track three specific developments. First, whether SpaceX shares trade below issue price by day 15, which would indicate that retail distribution exceeded natural demand and that institutional anchors declined to provide aftermarket support. Second, whether Schwab or Fidelity face FINRA arbitration claims from clients alleging that allocation favored high-net-worth accounts despite public commitments to egalitarian distribution. Third, whether the SEC opens a comment period on Rule 15c2-8 amendments, which govern IPO allocation disclosures, after Senator Elizabeth Warren's office requested review on June 6th. The outcome of that review determines whether future direct-to-retail offerings must disclose per-platform allocation percentages and account-tier eligibility criteria before pricing, a transparency standard that would disadvantage brokerages using opaque lottery or tenure-weighting systems.
SpaceX shares closed day one at $61.20, a 9.3% pop that falls below the 14.8% median for technology IPOs over $10 billion since 2021, but above the 6.1% threshold that typically signals appropriate pricing rather than money left on the table.