Historically, IPO investing was reserved for large financial institutions and high-net-worth individuals.
SpaceX is allocating a portion of its IPO shares for the retail investing community.
Large brokerage firms such as Charles Schwab and Fidelity usually require six-figure accounts balances to participate in IPOs -- but the rules may be changing.
Elon Musk's SpaceX is on the verge of launching the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history. For years, everyday investors were forced to watch IPOs from the sidelines, as offering prices were almost exclusively reserved for large financial institutions and high-net-worth clients. Retail investors chased IPO stocks once they hit the public exchanges -- often buying shares at inflated prices and missing the real upside.
Fidelity recently lowered its eligibility requirement for the SpaceX IPO to those who hold a modest $2,000 balance in their account. This is a dramatic shift from the traditional six-figure minimums imposed by legacy brokerages.
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On the surface, this might look like a win for small investors. However, a closer look at the mechanics of IPOs raises some legitimate questions about who really benefits from increased retail participation.
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IPO underwriters and selling shareholders generally allocate the vast majority of shares to large financial institutions, such as hedge funds and pension funds, as well as to accredited investors who can commit meaningful capital.
Retail investors are lucky to see even just a small percentage of the total offering. Even then, participation is usually gated by strict rules on account size and liquid net worth. Investors who miss the primary allocation are subsequently forced to buy shares in the market on opening day.
This often leads to investors paying enormous premiums above the IPO price. This playbook has been seen in several high-profile tech IPOs in recent years, including Snowflake, Palantir Technologies, Figma, and Cerebras Systems.
On Fidelity's website, the firm explains:
Most initial public offerings (IPOs) offer retail customers only 5% to 10% of the total offering, which significantly reduces the amount of stock available to our retail clients. SpaceX has decided to reserve a much higher percentage of the offering (up to 30%), which means there should be more shares available to retail clients, which is why we have decided to reduce IPO eligibility for this offering.
Lowering the account balance threshold allows a broader pool of investors to receive SpaceX IPO allocations. In theory, higher participation from more eligible clients means allocations can actually be filled. On the surface, this change looks like a way to give everyday investors a legitimate chance to buy SpaceX stock at the $135 offering price, rather than chasing momentum later.
On paper, these changes sound equitable. But in my eyes, the timing and scale of the change invite skepticism. Why now, and why for the SpaceX offering in particular?
Any IPO involves some degree of exit liquidity by design. After all, that is one of the major points of going public. However, when a company decides to open the door to retail investors after years of deliberately keeping it shut, I think it is reasonable to wonder about the motivation.
Smart investors should be asking: By expanding the pool of eligible investors, is SpaceX inherently creating a larger crowd of buyers at the offering price to provide smoother exit liquidity for pre-IPO shareholders?
Remember, retail investors have historically been the last to access and the first to suffer when sentiment shifts around hot IPOs. With only a $2,000 account minimum, the entry price for the SpaceX IPO is now low enough for droves of less experienced investors -- those most likely to chase a narrative rather than scrutinize the company's financials -- to pile in.
I think the prudent response is to exercise caution. With such a heavily marketed event on the horizon, do your own valuation diligence and size your investment position based on your personal risk profile.
While lowering the financial eligibility bar may appear like more inclusion, it can easily function as a gateway for those already planning to dump their shares. Moreover, it could also potentially be a sign that institutions are pushing back on SpaceX's planned $1.8 trillion valuation. Hence, the pool is being significantly broadened to retail investors -- a community prone to FOMO investing.
At the end of the day, I think it's best to approach the SpaceX IPO with clear eyes, not an open wallet.
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Charles Schwab is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Adam Spatacco has positions in Palantir Technologies. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Figma, Palantir Technologies, and Snowflake. The Motley Fool recommends Charles Schwab and recommends the following options: short June 2026 $97.50 calls on Charles Schwab. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.