SpaceX (SPCX) stock is sliding toward a make-or-break level as a selloff drags it more than 30% below its June peak, with the speculative heat that powered its record debut burning off fast.
Two weeks after its $75 billion IPO, the stock has round-tripped from euphoria to fragility. A fresh Starlink launch could not lift it, and cooling hype, weak space peers, and short-heavy positioning now point lower.
Hype Has Burned Out of the SpaceX Selloff
The SpaceX stock selloff has a clear tell, the hype is gone. A proprietary composite Hype Score, which blends momentum, volume intensity, volatility, and overbought readings into a 0 to 100 gauge of speculative intensity, has fallen to 18 and reads as cooling.
That marks a sharp reset from the debut. The SpaceX IPO share performance has flipped from a peak near $228 to slightly $150, at press time.
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A Falcon 9 Starlink launch from Vandenberg on June 25 did nothing for the tape yet, a sign the speculative bid has left. However, once the market opens it would be interesting to see if the Spacex stock price today reacts to the Starlink launch.
The same apathy shows up in volume as the decline grinds on. Buying and selling have both faded since June 23, leaving the stock range-bound for roughly 48 hours.
Underneath that quiet tape, money flow is split. Chaikin Money Flow (CMF), a proxy for buying and selling pressure, sits at a mild positive 0.10, yet price still trades below its volume-weighted average price (VWAP).
That mix matters because trading under VWAP means the average buyer since launch is now underwater. With even a rocket launch failing to lift it, the next clue is what SPCX actually moves with.
SPCX Trades Like a Space Stock, Not a Musk Stock
What SPCX moves with answers a defining question for the stock. Over 15-minute returns, it correlates 0.46 with space sector stocks like AST SpaceMobile (ASTS) and Rocket Lab (RKLB), but only 0.23 with Tesla (TSLA).
That gap makes the read clear. SPCX is trading on space-sector dynamics, not the Musk founder premium. That distinction matters because the sector is weak. Rocket Lab sits down roughly 44% month-on-month, and AST SpaceMobile has slid 45% in the same duration after a Q1 revenue miss.
SpaceX itself deepened that weakness, pulling capital out of smaller names and back into the giant on its debut. If a soft sector is setting the direction, positioning data shows who is leaning hardest into the move.
Smart Money Is Short, but Options Hold the Real Lever
Leaning hardest into the downside is the smart money. On Nansen data for the Hyperliquid perpetual that tracks SPCX, smart traders, whales and public figures are all net short, a rare unanimous stance.
That stance runs deep. Whales alone sit net short about $21.8 million, while the perp saw a net $140.6 million of selling over seven days, and the whale holder count fell about 24% in 10 days, which suggests distribution.
That positioning is a warning, not a trigger. The perpetual is oracle-priced and tracks the stock, so it reflects smart money positioning and sentiment but cannot by itself move the underlying.
What can move it is the options market, through dealer hedging. The debut set a single-stock record near 1.6 million contracts and sparked gamma squeeze talk toward $400, before at-the-money implied volatility fell from about 169% to the mid-80s.
That cooling has shifted the structure. The debut frenzy concentrated in short-dated calls struck at $210 to $250, well above the roughly $200 stock at the time, so with price now far below those strikes, dealer hedging can amplify declines rather than cushion them, just as Fidelity’s 15-day flipping penalty lapses around June 27 and frees up IPO supply.
SpaceX Stock Price Levels to Watch
It all comes down to one level. The SpaceX stock price today is holding above $148, the 0.786 Fibonacci level.
Hold it, and the range stays intact. Lose it on an hourly close, and the stock falls into a danger zone, opening the 1.0 retracement at $136 near the IPO price, with the 1.618 extension at $103 below.
Above it, buyers have work to do. They need to reclaim the 0.618 level at $157 to ease pressure, then $163 and $169. Even then, thin volume is the catch. A low-volume break can reverse fast, so SPCX support levels only carry weight on a closing basis.
The $148 line is make-or-break, separating a recoverable dip from a slide back toward the $136 IPO price and beyond.
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