The SpaceX IPO hedging challenge facing institutional investors is unlike anything Wall Street has encountered before: when SPCX begins trading on the Nasdaq on 12 June, there will be no directly comparable public company against which traders can build a hedge. Reuters reported that SpaceX targeted 11 June for IPO pricing, with the listing to follow the next day.
‘What are you going to do, short NASA?’ asks Dennis Davitt, chief investment officer at Millbank Dartmoor Portsmouth. It is a rhetorical question, but it captures the problem precisely.
The SpaceX IPO Hedging Challenge Has No Easy Proxy
For institutional investors who have been accumulating SpaceX equity through private markets, the pressure to hedge is real. The company’s private-market valuation has nearly tripled in the past year, according to Forge Global data. Shares on Forge’s secondary marketplace hit a record closing price of $634.05, a 215% gain over the prior 12 months, valuing the company at $1.51 trillion on the Globe and Mail’s Forge data. A separate analysis by the Journal of Space Commerce placed SpaceX’s IPO valuation target above $1.75 trillion as of late March 2026, though that figure reflects stated IPO targets rather than secondary-market pricing.
As a position grows in size relative to a portfolio, the urgency to offset that exposure grows with it. But the standard toolkit, short a comparable company, buy puts on a sector peer, construct a basket of correlated names, falls apart when the company in question has no comparable.
Davitt, who worked at Credit Suisse in 2004 on the Google IPO, draws the contrast directly. ‘Hedging it back then was easier because there were more things to sell,’ he says. ‘So when you put a hedge together on something like this, you create a basket of things that simulate the price action, but there’s nothing to sell in SpaceX.’
SpaceX’s business is genuinely difficult to replicate synthetically. The company reported $18.7 billion in 2025 revenue in its S-1 filing, according to Quartz, spanning rocket launches, the Starlink satellite broadband network, and, following SpaceX’s acquisition of xAI in February 2026, frontier AI models including Grok and the X platform. Its most recent funding round, Series N, raised $2.52 billion, according to Forge Global data as of 3 June 2026. No single listed company offers anything close to that combination.
Davitt does offer one form of reassurance on the price-action side. ‘My instinct, being old, is and having been around these bigger IPOs like this, is that it tends not to be that crazy 200% blow-off top,’ he says. ‘I do not believe that Elon Musk is going to allow this to IPO at $135 and trade up to $270 the first day.’
A Calendar That Makes the Trade Even Harder
Even if the opening day is orderly, the trading environment around it is not. Brent Kochuba, founder of SpotGamma, laid out the compounding pressures in an email: ‘I think the initial SPCX markets are going to be pretty challenging for traders meaning super wide and with a very high IV. Not only is the price action of the stock under question, but you have these levered ETFs which are going to launch, and then forced index buying. Compounding that are the FOMC meeting and VIX expiration on the next day (17th), followed by a massive June options expiry.’
The leveraged products arriving alongside the listing are themselves a source of structural complexity. Defiance ETFs announced on 10 June 2026 the pending launch of the Defiance Daily Target 2X Long SpaceX ETF (NYSE: SPCU), which seeks 200% of the daily percentage change of SPCX and resets daily. Direxion has registered the Direxion Daily SpaceX Bull 2X ETF (ticker: LOFF), seeking 200% of SPCX’s daily performance, and noting on its product page that SPCX ‘recently commenced its initial public offering and may experience heightened volatility.’ Leverage Shares has filed a prospectus for a 2X Long SpaceX Daily ETF tracking SPCX as well.
An SEC registration statement filed 20 May 2026 describes an additional product: a fund whose primary objective is to achieve twice the income from selling options on SPCX common shares by writing options on those same leveraged ETFs. The derivative stack, options on ETFs that are themselves leveraged to a freshly listed stock with no trading history, is the kind of structure that concentrates rather than disperses risk.
Reuters reported that SpaceX also sought early inclusion in the Nasdaq-100 index, which would add a layer of forced buying from passive funds tracking the index the moment inclusion is confirmed. For traders attempting to manage the SpaceX IPO hedging challenge, that means price discovery is not simply a function of what investors think the company is worth. It is a function of mechanisms, levered daily resets, index rebalancing flows, wide options spreads on an untested underlier, that operate largely independently of fundamental analysis. The test comes on 12 June.
