Stock that has existed for exactly two weeks moves in any direction
"The people who bought this IPO are going to have their lives changed forever."
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Stock that has existed for exactly two weeks moves in any direction
"The people who bought this IPO are going to have their lives changed forever."
Gonna be funny when every rocket lauch failure tanks the stock, they should have stayed private lmfao
stayed private, and never merged with xAI/Twitter
I wouldn't be surprised if the opposite happened given how this gimp's companies are known for being divorced from the fundamentals.
I think people might see that sometimes, but not understand why, because they just see a starship blows up headlines and don't understand what is happening as it's a test program (for now), and the headlines / stories don't convey that.
So when things explode, sometimes it's fine, and the stock might go up because a lot of really important things still were tested, some for the first time, and they went well.
Other times, things will explode and it can cause huge delays, and while they learn something, it's still 'bad' compared to the above blow ups, and the stock will very likely go down when these ones happen.
And then sometimes, something goes wrong on the test pad and you blow it up, and that is very bad. It's a test pad, its meant for that, but it causes huuuuuge delays.
But OP is right, they brought this new chaos upon themselves by going public. They really shouldn't have done it yet.
This is normal for an IPO look at the history of ASTS or RKLB they very similar to SPCX and have a lot of volatility.
I’ve made a lot of money on both. But I refuse to invest in companies owned by fascist pricks who has gleefully killed people and has boasted about it.
I bought some around 150 when the IPO first hit, I watched it jump to ~200, and then I got scared and sold it the following Monday around 190-ish. It's been holding around 185, but I'm just not sure what's going to happen with the stock.
Don't pay attention to me I'm just a guy on the Internet.
Back when Facebook stock took a slide after the initial IPO, I bought at $25 and sold at $50 a year later, thinking I had absolutely cleaned up.
When I go under space x, I usually don't do it on my knees but coyote know and he ramage the main. Stream focus comes down to the recathent driver. We accelerate the fook outta that. Grammar doesn't know what's under were hrinkled foot. Takes a minutesm more god says? Always never good enough but alws7s the sins of man come bouring in. Makes it recathencize. You know how it goes
Good grace dude, have someone call 112 you're having a stroke
Maybe just high? In which case they probably shouldn't have access to a "broadcast my thoughts to the world" device.
God damn righr, I am stroking it to the great Gatsby right now. Good shit. Love them glasses.
That's a weird way of saying a stock started at $135 and is now at $181 a week later, but some people bought it when it was higher than that for a few days.
I mean seriously? I want spacx to fail super hard and musk to get completely dumped on, but this amount of volatility is completely typical when well known companies start an IPO. It sucks it's like 35% higher than the initial offering price.
Don't worry. We all get to prop up this failing stock in the next few days, when the Indexes start getting forcibly loaded up with Elmo's latest meme stock. Then the disease will just be endemic in our portfolios.
We all get to prop up this failing stock in the next few days, when the Indexes start getting forcibly loaded up
Indexes won't start buying into these stocks for a few more months. And they aren't forced to buy. They set their own policies, they answer to their own boards, and they can absolutely choose to avoid this stock if they choose.
I would say the bigger threat is SPCX stock undergoing the same manipulation and price-pumping we saw happen with Tesla. When the SEC is fully castrated, the Feds have already acknowledged SpaceX is "Too Big To Fail", and the big banks all have oodles of shares leveraged to the hilt, there's a vested interest across the board in this stock going up up up forever.
Then the disease will just be endemic in our portfolios.
The disease is the stock market as a whole. Asset inflation creates malinvestment. The fixation on economic growth means we'll immolate useful capital in the name of the Big Number Going Up. And disproportionate ownership stakes cause property to congeal into fewer and fewer hands with every generation.
Our portfolios aren't at risk, because our porfolios are less and less important to the final valuation of these markets. This is six big companies sucking each other off in an ouroboros of graft and fraud. If the markets went to zero tomorrow, we'd be far better off over the long run than if this post-COVID bull run never ends.
I don't own any ai effected tech stock, but I know my entire portfolio will go down when the ai bubble bursts. Sucks. Not sure if I'll try and sell off and buy the dip back in, or just ride it out, yet.
The good news is that all of the SpaceX top valuation won't actually drag all of our Collective portfolios if it were to collapse, it will sting a bit but all of us invested in, say, VTI and VOO, can absorb that much stupid.
I wonder what happens if there's a handful of companies immediately behind it they look just like it though. Thankfully S&P 500 has said that they will not index SpaceX until they actually earn it through profitability.
I own a tremendous amount of AI affected tech stocks relative to the rest of my portfolio, and I'm trying to divest but doing so bleeds me through additional capital gains taxes for my state, which I wholeheartedly believe should exist as long as the billionaires have to pay them, too. It's just a difficult calculation for how much risk I want to wear versus how much capital gains I want to incur to make my way towards the exits to put my money in more boring things.
After briefly pushing SpaceX’s market value close to $3 trillion, investors have begun reassessing whether the stock’s rapid advance can be justified by fundamentals.
Nothing in the stock market has been about fundamentals for a very long time. Especially regarding Musk companies.
I believe Uber was the company to break the fundamentals game
The entire fundamentals game was broken back in around 2012 when, in the aftermath of the 2008 Crash, Central Bank meetings setting interest rates became more important in setting the direction the Stock Market took (up if they lowered interest rates, down if they did not) than fundamentals.
It just so happens that the period when Uber rose coincided with that period of high interventionism by Central Banks which lasted almost a decade since their solutions for the 2008 Crash did not address the underlying causes and the recovery following that Crash was one of the slowest post-Crash recoveries ever (in fact, Interest Rates and GDP Growth are still not back to their historical trends).
It wasn't Uber who broke the Financial System's reflection of real wealth creation, it was Zero Interest Rate Policy flooding the Economy with pretty much free money and Too Big To Fail meaning that certain Financial Institutions could do every Financial Crime they felt like and never really be punished for it and take any risk they felt like because Central Bank money was always there in the background to save them if they went too far.
Chicken and egg problem there.Have you considered the possibility that the Fed just got better at making projections?
it was Zero Interest Rate Policy
The interest rate has been above 2% for more than four years now. It's currently at 3.75% so even if it is as you say, it doesn't explain what's happening now. I think I'll just stick with "irrational exuberance" being the explanation.
Boo hoo my shares in a company owned by a fascist and with absolutely awful revenue in comparison to it's valuation are losing value just as expected
cry me a river
Saying the average buyer is almost underwater is another way of saying that the average buyer has made a profit.
The media does this constantly with Elon.
So the pump dumped?
Wow. Such surprise. /s
Oh look, the completely expected and basically dependable event that happens after EVERY IPO, happened. Anyone jumping on an initial IPO is a fucking idiot. They always go under.
They might eventually still make it back to be profitable if they wait months or even years... or they could have waited a few weeks and bought the inevitable dip and never been underwater in the first place, making more profit.
...in USA america, initial IPOs are ATM machines to fund CD deposits...
I mean, is it really an IPO if it isn't insanely overpriced when initially offered?
Yeah, I would say it's quite usual to see a big dip right from the start. It's just hamsters for whom buying Space X is their first trade don't know about that
$185 is still way above the already ridiculous IPO price of $135. If this market made any sense, it wouldn't have gotten this high in the first place, but since we're here, it should really continue dropping. However, knowing how this market is, I wouldn't be surprised if this is just a momentary dip before going back up for some dumb made-up reason.
Yeah, unerring faith in the magical powers of Elon continues to be a hell of a drug. Tesla does not remotely justify its current valuation either.