🚨 SpaceX Could Become the Biggest Exit Liquidity Event in Market History

And history suggests investors should pay attention.

Over the last 15 years, many of the most anticipated IPOs delivered painful drawdowns after listing:

📉 Robinhood: -90%
📉 Rivian: -88%
📉 Lyft: -79%
📉 Uber: -68%
📉 Coinbase: -57%
📉 Twitter: -58%
📉 Snap: -56%
📉 Palantir: -53%
📉 Facebook: -54%

The average pattern is clear: hype peaks around the IPO, while reality catches up afterward.

These weren't weak companies. They were market leaders, backed by top institutions, heavily promoted by media, and considered "can't miss" opportunities.

Now enter SpaceX.

Reports suggest a potential valuation between $1.75T and $2T, making it one of the most valuable companies on Earth from day one.

At the same time:

🔥 Massive retail demand
🔥 Limited public float
🔥 Early investors sitting on enormous unrealized gains

That's the perfect recipe for prices to detach from fundamentals.

A great company doesn't automatically mean a great stock at any price.

Facebook eventually became one of the world's most successful businesses. Its stock still fell 54% within a year of listing.

Coinbase became a dominant crypto company. Its stock still experienced a 57% drawdown.

The lesson?

Retail investors often buy maximum excitement, while early investors gain liquidity.

If SpaceX goes public, the real question isn't whether it's a great company.

The real question is:

👉 At what valuation does a great company become a bad investment?

#SpaceX #IPO #ElonMusk #stockmarket