arrow_back Market Intelligence SpaceX falls below IPO price: How much of your money should be in futuristic tech?
results · Livemint · 23 Jun 2026

SpaceX falls below IPO price: How much of your money should be in futuristic tech?

Wall Street's biggest tech companies saw heavy selling as investors have started questioning whether the AI-driven market rally had become too stretched.

The Nasdaq and the S&P 500 fell to over one-week lows on Tuesday, dragged down by sharp losses in semiconductor stocks as investors braced for a more hawkish Federal Reserve and scrutinised growing debt-funded AI spending.

If losses hold, the Nasdaq 100 would lose over $1 trillion in market value. Nvidia fell 3%, Alphabet shed 1.2%, and chipmakers Intel, Marvell Technology and Advanced Micro Devices fell between 6.2% and 8.7%.

Amid the broader tech selloff, SpaceX has emerged as the biggest talking point, with its stock slipping below its IPO opening price. The company has now lost more than $600 billion in market value after declining for three consecutive trading sessions. Monday's sharp 16% drop wiped out nearly $400 billion in a single day, making it one of the largest one-day value losses ever recorded by a listed company.

As the recent crash rattles investor confidence, experts explain how to navigate market volatility and determine the right allocation to futuristic technologies such as AI and space tech.

Speaking about the SpaceX crash in particular, Viram Shah, Founder & CEO, Vested Finance, noted, “A 16% drop in a single session looks big, but for a company that listed barely two weeks ago and is funding a huge AI and space build-out, that's close to the cost of admission.”

High-growth tech doesn't trade on this year's earnings but it trades on a story about the next decade.

“The signal here isn't that something's broken. It's that when most of the value sits in the future, the value is going to swing. If you can't sit through a 20% drawdown without flinching, the position was probably too big to start with.”

He further explains, Space technology is no longer just about rockets. It now includes satellite internet, defence applications, satellite data, and even AI-powered services built around space infrastructure.

In fact, Indian investor should see this as an opportunity as “it has become much easier to invest in these themes through US-listed stocks and ETFs.”

The biggest challenge here is balancing innovation with valuation risk. Shah said, “On a name like SpaceX, you'll see serious analysts land a long way apart on fair value, which is really just an honest way of saying nobody's sure.”

You can be completely right about where space and AI are heading and still overpay on the way in.

“Hence they should be treated as a small, high-conviction part of a portfolio rather than its foundation.”

Strategy to follow: Keep the speculative, high-conviction stuff small enough that you can actually hold it through the swings, and let a diversified core do the heavy lifting. Innovation tends to reward patience more than precision timing."

Sanchari Ghosh is an Assistant Editor at Mint with over 12 years of experience in journalism, specialising in personal finance, DLT & DeFi, geopolitics and foreign policy, with a particular emphasis on how these areas intersect. <br> She writes extensively about how money works in everyday life—helping readers navigate personal finance decisions. <br> As AI reshapes investing behaviour, capital is increasingly flowing into decentralized ecosystems, redefining how assets are managed, traded, and valued. She focuses on explaining how money flows within frameworks like Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT), DeFi protocols, and crypto markets—while also exploring what the future of money could look like in a trustless, programmable financial world. <br> She also focuses on immigration-related issues, simplifying complex topics around visas, passports, overseas financial planning, and the many practical challenges Indians face while moving or living abroad. <br> Alongside personal finance, Sanchari has a strong understanding of international politics, contemporary and historical conflicts, and global state decisions. She closely tracks how geopolitical developments influence economies, markets, and individual financial choices, bringing together finance and global affairs in her reporting. <br> She began her career as a desk editor, which gave her a strong foundation in news writing. Over time, her interest naturally shifted toward personal finance. Before joining Mint in 2020, she worked DNA, The Times of India, Outlook Money, BloombergQuint, and ETMoney. At Mint, she got an opportunity to expand her coverage to include immigration and geopolitical developments while continuing to closely follow personal finance trends and market movements.As a journalist, she is committed to accuracy, intellectual rigour, and fairness. <br> She is an English Major and her work took her across cities including Delhi, Mumbai, and Pune. Living independently from an early age gave her firsthand experience in managing life and money on her own. This practical exposure sparked her strong interest in personal finance. <br> Outside the newsroom, Sanchari is a sports enthusiast who regularly plays lawn tennis and squash. In her younger years, she was also a national-level badminton player.

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