The US stock market is flashing warning signs not seen since the dot-com collapse. A veteran market analyst with 13 years of experience is sounding the alarm over the current IPO boom, calling it the biggest red flag of his career.
At the center of the warning is SpaceX, going public at $2 trillion and 100x revenue. That compares to Apple’s IPO at under $2 billion and 15x revenue — a contrast that exposes how extreme current valuations have become.
The SpaceX IPO is not designed to reward new buyers. Fidelity dropped its minimum investment from $500,000 to $2,000, and SpaceX allocated 30% of shares to retail participants. Millions of new buyers were brought in just before the listing.
Insiders, however, control 95% of all shares. That represents approximately $1.66 trillion in privately held stock sitting above the market. Retail buyers are entering at peak prices while those holding the bulk of shares prepare to sell.
The unlock schedule makes the threat concrete. A 60-day lockup triggers a 20% release once the stock climbs 30%. From day 70, recurring 7% tranches unlock across days 90, 105, 120, and 135. Another 28% follows Q3 earnings.
By November, roughly 93% of insider shares become sellable. That volume hitting the market over a compressed window is a direct threat to the broader US stock market, not just SpaceX’s price.
Institutions are not waiting. They are already shortening index inclusion timelines, selling current holdings, and raising cash ahead of forced buying tied to new listings. That repositioning creates selling pressure across existing equities right now.
Retail investors are doing the same, liquidating portfolios to fund IPO participation. The analyst draws a direct parallel to the late 1990s dot-com era, when capital rotation out of existing stocks into new listings preceded a broad market crash.
SpaceX reported $4.3 billion in losses in Q1 2026 alone. Cumulative losses stand at $41.3 billion. Most retail participants never reach that data, buried deep inside a 300-page prospectus. That information gap consistently favors insiders over new buyers.
Anthropic and OpenAI carry the same structural problem. Both trade at valuations inflated by circular investment flows involving Nvidia.
Neither has reached profitability, and current pricing requires earnings growth that analysts say is unlikely to materialize.
The analyst’s conclusion is straightforward: capital flowing into these IPOs exits the US stock market, and that exit pressure is building fast.
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