SpaceX raised approximately $75 billion in its initial public offering this week, making it the largest IPO ever completed.
The company briefly reached a valuation approaching $2 trillion. Demand from both institutional and retail investors was exceptionally strong.

The listing marks a major moment for the commercial space industry. Analysts say it could encourage other large private companies to consider going public in the coming years.
For many investors, the event represented more than a stock trade. It signaled a new chapter for space as an investable sector.
Reports emerged this week that OpenAI has confidentially filed for a public offering.
Details remain limited, but the news immediately attracted investor attention. OpenAI has grown rapidly thanks to the adoption of ChatGPT and rising demand for enterprise AI tools.
Many investors believe a future OpenAI listing could rank among the largest technology IPOs ever.
Currently, investors gain exposure to OpenAI indirectly through companies like Nvidia, Microsoft, and Broadcom. A direct listing would change that.
The excitement around SpaceX sent shockwaves through publicly traded space companies.
Rocket Lab, AST SpaceMobile, Planet Labs, and Intuitive Machines all experienced sharp price swings. Some investors bought these stocks as alternative ways to play the growing space economy.
Others worried the SpaceX IPO could pull capital away from smaller competitors in the short term.
Despite the swings, long-term interest in the sector remains steady. Satellite communications, launch services, defense contracts, and Earth observation continue to draw investor attention.
Energy markets moved sharply this week as investors tracked developments between the United States and Iran.
Prices first climbed on geopolitical concerns, then pulled back as optimism grew around a possible diplomatic resolution.
The swings rippled through energy, airline, and transportation stocks. Investors are watching closely because oil prices directly affect inflation and consumer spending.
Any shift in Middle East supply dynamics could keep energy markets active in the weeks ahead.
The demand seen during the SpaceX IPO showed investors are still willing to back large growth companies.
Its success is now fueling speculation about when other major private firms might go public. Names like OpenAI, Anthropic, Stripe, and Databricks are being mentioned regularly.
If those listings happen, retail and institutional investors could gain earlier access to some of the most influential companies in technology and AI.
The SpaceX IPO did not just break records. It may have reset expectations for what a technology listing can look like in 2026.
The post Weekly Recap: SpaceX’s Record IPO, OpenAI Listing Reports, Space Stock Swings, and Oil Price Moves appeared first on CoinCentral.
