SpaceX Splits Stock Before IPO, What Is the Impact on US Stocks? What Should Retail Investors Note?

Source Tradingkey

TradingKey - According to the latest news, SpaceX has announced a 1-for-5 stock split ahead of its IPO, adjusting the fair market value per share from $526.59 to $105.32. The split is expected to be processed during the week of May 18 and completed by May 22.

SpaceX's announcement of a stock split indicates that it has begun preparing for public market trading. While the split itself does not change SpaceX's enterprise value, it significantly lowers the barrier to entry for ordinary investors.

It should be noted that this stock split is tied to SpaceX's management structure. The company has disclosed that it will adopt a dual-class share structure after listing, with public investors holding Class A shares and insiders holding Class B shares, the latter carrying 10 votes per share. Musk will retain majority voting power, holding approximately 42.5% of the equity and 83.8% of the voting control. The dual-class structure and Musk's absolute control may make some institutional investors more cautious, as they are buying into a growth story with almost no binding authority over corporate governance.

For the U.S. stock market, the impact of the split is limited. SpaceX is still a private company, so the split will not lead to direct inclusion in the S&P 500 or Nasdaq indices, nor will it immediately change the earnings expectations of listed companies. However, importantly, as the largest IPO in U.S. history, SpaceX's listing could exert a significant siphoning effect on market capital once it goes public.

This siphoning effect is mainly reflected in two aspects:

First, capital will prioritize the strongest narrative. SpaceX's fundraising scale reaches $75 billion, equivalent to the total amount raised in the entire U.S. IPO market in 2025. Such massive capital demand will directly attract a large amount of institutional and high-net-worth funds to flow from traditional sectors (such as technology, energy, and consumer goods) into the aerospace sector.

Second, index funds will follow passively. According to reports from Reuters, SpaceX aims for early inclusion in the Nasdaq 100 Index. If it is indeed fast-tracked for inclusion, passive funds and institutions tracking the index will become a source of stable buying support.

For ordinary investors, the stock split significantly lowers the threshold for retail participation. Musk previously stated that up to 30% of the IPO shares would be allocated to individual investors, a proportion much higher than typical retail placements. For many retail investors who previously could not afford such private assets, the 5-for-1 split reduces the nominal price per share, lowering both the psychological and financial barriers simultaneously.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
goTop
quote