SpaceX's slide risks turning blockbuster IPO into confidence test
QQQ•Some see normal price discovery rather than panic
A drop below the IPO price would not be unusual for a newly listed company. Shares of Cerebras Systems, which went public in May, have dropped below the IPO price, and Meta, formerly known as Facebook, fell similarly after its debut.
Investors often fixate on IPO prices and early trading, said Ryan Lee, senior vice president of product and strategy at financial services firm Direxion.
"The reality is, (SpaceX) is still undergoing some of this price discovery process," Lee said.
A fall for SpaceX below $135 would reflect "normal, albeit painful" market mechanics, especially as investors, venture capitalists and employees sell shares after lockups expire, said Gabriel Shahin, CEO at Falcon Wealth Planning.
"A near-term dip below the $135 threshold would not fundamentally alter our current positioning or cause us to panic-sell," he said.




