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Edition of 16:00 CETTuesday, June 23, 2026
307 outlets · 17 languages765 briefings today
Economy & MarketsMonday, June 22, 2026

SpaceX Stock Rout Deepens, Wiping Out $600 Billion as Musk’s Wealth Drops $350 Billion

A third day of heavy selling pushed shares below their debut price after the company announced its first bond issuance and received a low ESG rating, while broader tech stocks also fell.

SpaceX shares tumbled 16% on Monday to close at $154.60, falling below the $160.90 level recorded on their 12 June debut and extending a three-day decline that erased more than $600 billion in market value from the mid-June peak of nearly $3 trillion. The selloff sliced an estimated $350 billion from Elon Musk’s net worth, according to Forbes, though his roughly 38% stake still leaves him the world’s only trillionaire at about $1.1 trillion. The rout intensified after the company disclosed plans to issue at least $20 billion in bonds—its first such offering—to refinance a bridge loan tied to the xAI acquisition, and after index provider MSCI assigned SpaceX a CCC sustainability rating, its lowest tier, flagging significant environmental, social and governance risks.

Analysts in New York note that the IPO’s unusually low float, with just 4.2% of shares available on day one, magnified both the initial rally and the current reversal. Retail investors, allocated an outsized 30% of the offering, bought a net $405 million in the first five sessions, but inflows have since moderated. The bond issuance, aimed at funding AI ambitions without further diluting equity holders, unsettled a market already questioning the company’s governance structure and heavy cash consumption. Broader sentiment soured as Alphabet and other megacap tech names fell, dragging the Nasdaq Composite down 1.3%, while oil prices retreated on progress in US-Iran peace talks and hawkish Federal Reserve commentary lifted Treasury yields.

Viewed from Buenos Aires, the scale of Musk’s fortune was captured in a local calculation: an average Argentine worker would need more than 80 million years of uninterrupted saving to match it, a span exceeding the time since the dinosaurs’ extinction. In London, some strategists likened the stock’s trajectory to meme-like behaviour driven by expectations of further buying rather than fundamentals. Morningstar, maintaining a bearish stance, cut its fair value estimate to $62 per share after the all-stock acquisition of AI coding startup Cursor diluted existing holders. KeyBanc Capital Markets initiated coverage with a sector-weight rating, arguing that long-term value is already reflected in the price.

The immediate focus turns to the pricing of the bond offering and the approaching lock-up expirations. From August, restrictions on insider sales begin to lift, potentially releasing up to 44% of currently restricted shares and adding further supply pressure. Broader market attention will centre on Micron Technology’s quarterly results on Wednesday and Thursday’s US Personal Consumption Expenditures data, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, which could reinforce expectations of a September rate increase.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 8 languages

41%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressLatin American press
Indian & South Asian press
TriumphPragmatism

The Jio IPO filing has ignited a rally in Reliance shares, heralding what could be India's largest-ever public offering. The move is framed as a strategic unlock of value that will double the group's earnings and position the telecom unit as a national champion with a market capitalization rivaling global giants.

Latin American press/ Bolivarian / progressive
OutrageAlarm

The Jio IPO is portrayed as yet another mechanism for a billionaire to amass even greater wealth, siphoning billions from public markets while millions of Indians face digital inequality. It sounds the alarm on deepening wealth concentration and questions whether such mega-offerings truly serve the common good.

Related articles

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Upd. 01:05 AM8 languages · 19 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
19 outlets|8 languages|3 min read
Monday, June 22, 2026

SpaceX Stock Rout Deepens, Wiping Out $600 Billion as Musk’s Wealth Drops $350 Billion

A third day of heavy selling pushed shares below their debut price after the company announced its first bond issuance and received a low ESG rating, while broader tech stocks also fell.

SpaceX shares tumbled 16% on Monday to close at $154.60, falling below the $160.90 level recorded on their 12 June debut and extending a three-day decline that erased more than $600 billion in market value from the mid-June peak of nearly $3 trillion. The selloff sliced an estimated $350 billion from Elon Musk’s net worth, according to Forbes, though his roughly 38% stake still leaves him the world’s only trillionaire at about $1.1 trillion. The rout intensified after the company disclosed plans to issue at least $20 billion in bonds—its first such offering—to refinance a bridge loan tied to the xAI acquisition, and after index provider MSCI assigned SpaceX a CCC sustainability rating, its lowest tier, flagging significant environmental, social and governance risks.

Analysts in New York note that the IPO’s unusually low float, with just 4.2% of shares available on day one, magnified both the initial rally and the current reversal. Retail investors, allocated an outsized 30% of the offering, bought a net $405 million in the first five sessions, but inflows have since moderated. The bond issuance, aimed at funding AI ambitions without further diluting equity holders, unsettled a market already questioning the company’s governance structure and heavy cash consumption. Broader sentiment soured as Alphabet and other megacap tech names fell, dragging the Nasdaq Composite down 1.3%, while oil prices retreated on progress in US-Iran peace talks and hawkish Federal Reserve commentary lifted Treasury yields.

Viewed from Buenos Aires, the scale of Musk’s fortune was captured in a local calculation: an average Argentine worker would need more than 80 million years of uninterrupted saving to match it, a span exceeding the time since the dinosaurs’ extinction. In London, some strategists likened the stock’s trajectory to meme-like behaviour driven by expectations of further buying rather than fundamentals. Morningstar, maintaining a bearish stance, cut its fair value estimate to $62 per share after the all-stock acquisition of AI coding startup Cursor diluted existing holders. KeyBanc Capital Markets initiated coverage with a sector-weight rating, arguing that long-term value is already reflected in the price.

The immediate focus turns to the pricing of the bond offering and the approaching lock-up expirations. From August, restrictions on insider sales begin to lift, potentially releasing up to 44% of currently restricted shares and adding further supply pressure. Broader market attention will centre on Micron Technology’s quarterly results on Wednesday and Thursday’s US Personal Consumption Expenditures data, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, which could reinforce expectations of a September rate increase.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 19 outlets · 8 languages

41%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable71%
Critical29%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 8 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressLatin American press
Indian & South Asian press
TriumphPragmatism

The Jio IPO filing has ignited a rally in Reliance shares, heralding what could be India's largest-ever public offering. The move is framed as a strategic unlock of value that will double the group's earnings and position the telecom unit as a national champion with a market capitalization rivaling global giants.

Latin American press/ Bolivarian / progressive
OutrageAlarm

The Jio IPO is portrayed as yet another mechanism for a billionaire to amass even greater wealth, siphoning billions from public markets while millions of Indians face digital inequality. It sounds the alarm on deepening wealth concentration and questions whether such mega-offerings truly serve the common good.

This story appeared in

19 outlets · 8 languages

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