Stocks

SpaceX stock: $800 bull vs $115 bear after Starship abort

The comforting story about SpaceX stock is that Thursday’s aborted Starship launch was just an engineering hiccup and the dip is a buying opportunity. Both halves might be true, but the framing misses what actually changed: for the first time in SpaceX’s history, a routine test-flight abort — the kind that happened repeatedly before the IPO with zero financial consequence — is now a market event that erased billions in public-market value. SPCX trades near $125.40 as of July 17, 2026 (MarketBeat), below its $135 IPO price and down 18.5% since the June debut, after the company scrubbed its 13th Starship flight when four Super Heavy engines failed to ignite. The analyst spread on the same stock runs from CFRA’s $115 bear case to Raymond James’ $800 bull case — a seven-fold range that is the widest we have tracked across this entire bull-versus-bear series.

That $115-to-$800 spread is the story, because it is not a disagreement about a quarter — it is a disagreement about what SpaceX is. Having mapped this series across HIMS, Ethereum and the AI-infrastructure names, SPCX is the cleanest case yet of a private-market valuation dream colliding with public-market price discovery in real time. In the private secondaries, SpaceX was marked toward a $3 trillion-plus valuation on the promise of Starlink and Starship; in the public tape, retail that bought the hype above $200 is capitulating, and a crypto prediction market’s odds of SPCX closing July higher collapsed from 61% to 32% in days, per Benzinga. The abort did not change the engineering. It changed who sets the price — and that transfer, from patient private capital to daily public sentiment, is the real event.

Key Facts:

  • • SPCX trades near $125.40 (July 17, 2026), below its $135 IPO price and down 18.5% since the June 12 debut — MarketBeat, CNBC
  • • Bull case: $800 — Raymond James, implying roughly +398% upside — MarketBeat
  • • Bear case: $115 — CFRA, implying roughly −31% downside; Moffett Nathanson sits at $131 — MarketBeat
  • • Average 12-month target: ~$234–$244 across 32–37 analysts, a Moderate-to-Strong Buy consensus (24 Buys) — MarketBeat, TipRanks
  • • Starship Flight 13 aborted July 16 when four Super Heavy engines failed to ignite; two Raptors will be replaced — Euronews
  • • Crypto prediction-market odds of SPCX closing July higher fell from 61% to 32% — Benzinga
  • • SPCX was added to the Nasdaq-100 in early July, then fell below its debut price in a multi-day slide — CNBC

What’s actually happening: the first launch as a listed company

Flight 13 was the first Starship test since SpaceX became a public company, and that context turned a familiar engineering ritual into a governance-grade event. The launch window opened at 5:45 p.m. Texas time on July 16; the automatic abort fired before liftoff when the Super Heavy booster’s startup sequence left at least four engines unlit. The safety system did exactly what it is built to do — too few engines is a scrubbed launch, not a failed one — and pre-IPO, that distinction was academic to anyone but engineers. Post-IPO, it printed red on a Nasdaq-100 component.

Elon Musk narrated the abort in real time. “Some of the engines didn’t start, triggering an automatic launch abort. Now offloading propellant. Next launch attempt hopefully in a few days,” he posted, following up with the fix: “To be confident of a good flight, 2 Raptors will be removed & replaced. Most probable launch timing is early next week.” (Euronews) In hardware terms, replacing two Raptor engines and retrying within days is a routine turnaround. In market terms, it extended a six-day losing streak and pushed the stock further under its offer price — the disconnect FinanceFeeds flagged the moment the listing priced, in why Wall Street couldn’t let SPCX fall.

The deeper shift is temporal. SpaceX’s development culture is built on rapid iterative failure — blow up early prototypes, learn, refly — a cadence that made it the most capable launch provider on Earth precisely because aborts and explosions carried no financial penalty. A public listing attaches a daily price to every one of those events. The company that thrived on visible failure now answers to a market that punishes it.

Industry response: the valuation-versus-revenue argument goes public

The most consequential response is not from an institution but from the retail base now setting the marginal price. The prediction-market collapse from 61% to 32% is one signal; the capitulation on trading forums is louder. The single most-upvoted SPCX post this month is a retail investor documenting a $200,000 loss on the stock, with the top reply — 2,075 upvotes — pointing at the core bear thesis: “Crazy that people knew the insanely bloated valuation but still went long.” Another widely-shared comment did the math that anchors the skeptics: “when you see valuation of 3T and they only make like 50b off Starlink.” That is the entire bear case in one sentence — a spacefaring monopoly priced as though Starlink’s revenue already justified a multi-trillion-dollar market cap.

Institutional desks are, remarkably, on the opposite side. Of roughly 32 to 37 covering analysts, the consensus is a Buy, with Raymond James at $800, Arete Research at $401, Deutsche Bank at $255, Needham at $250 and Morgan Stanley at $225 — an average near $234–$244 that implies more than 85% upside from the July price. Only CFRA ($115) and Moffett Nathanson ($131) see downside from here. This is the mirror image of the HIMS setup we broke down in the $40-versus-$21 bull/bear case: there, the market price had run above the analyst average and the street was upgrading from behind; here, the market has fallen below the entire target range and the street is standing pat, insisting the tape is wrong. When retail and the sell side diverge this violently on a Nasdaq-100 name, one of them is about to be repriced.

The numbers: $800 bull, $115 bear, a seven-fold spread

Scenario Target vs $125 price Anchor
Extreme bull $800 +398% Raymond James — full Starlink + Starship optionality
Bull $401 +220% Arete Research
Street average ~$234–$244 +87% to +95% 32–37 analysts, Moderate/Strong Buy
Cautious $225 +80% Morgan Stanley
Bear $131 +5% Moffett Nathanson
Extreme bear $115 −31% CFRA

Sources: MarketBeat and TipRanks analyst compilations (July 17, 2026). Table compiled July 17, 2026.

The synthesis no single target reveals: the SPCX spread is not just wide, it is the widest in this series — a seven-fold range from $115 to $800 on one stock, versus the roughly ten-fold on OKLO, but on a company already generating real Starlink revenue rather than a pre-revenue reactor. When we deconstructed OKLO’s $140-versus-$14 split, the disagreement was about whether a technology would work at all. SPCX’s disagreement is subtler and more dangerous for holders: everyone agrees the technology works — Falcon 9 is the most reliable rocket in history and Starlink is a genuine business — the fight is entirely about the multiple. A spread this wide on a proven operator means the market has no shared framework for valuing it, and stocks without a shared valuation framework trade on flows and sentiment, not fundamentals. That is precisely why a launch abort moved it. Until an earnings cadence gives the market a number to anchor on, every Starship event — success or scrub — will swing the price more than the underlying business warrants.

There is a crypto-native footnote to the price discovery that is more than a curiosity. Before SPCX ever traded on Nasdaq, tokenized SpaceX proxies on venues like Gate and pre-IPO platforms were already quoting the company, and those synthetic markets ran hot into the debut — FinanceFeeds documented how the SpaceX IPO crushed every tokenized stock on day one and how crypto rails priced SPCX toward $2.3 trillion first. Those same 24/7 markets are now the leading indicator on the way down: the Benzinga-cited prediction market repricing from 61% to 32% is exactly the kind of continuous, capital-backed sentiment gauge that traditional equity markets lack between earnings dates. For a stock whose fair value nobody agrees on, the prediction markets are functioning as the real-time consensus the analyst PDFs cannot provide — and right now that consensus is bearish into month-end.

The regulatory and structural layer: index flows meet founder control

Two structural forces now pull against each other. On one side, the early-July Nasdaq-100 inclusion forces passive index funds to hold SPCX regardless of valuation — a mechanical bid that should dampen downside. On the other, the same inclusion means every index-tracking retirement account is now exposed to a stock whose price reacts to rocket-engine ignition sequences, a concentration of idiosyncratic risk that has drawn scrutiny given SpaceX’s dual-class structure and Musk’s concentrated control. The tension is the governance version of the innovation-versus-caution push-pull: index membership demands the stability of a blue chip, while the company operates with the risk appetite of a venture-stage moonshot.

There is a live regulatory subplot too. Reporting that SpaceX may direct stock toward federal children’s savings accounts, alongside the company’s deep government-contract entanglement (NASA, the Space Force, and Starlink’s defense business), keeps SPCX in a category few Nasdaq-100 names occupy: a listed equity whose largest customer and primary regulator are frequently the same US government. For institutional allocators, that is both a moat and a headline risk — the kind of dual-use exposure that widens, rather than narrows, the plausible valuation band.

What happens next: three scenarios into the relaunch and August

Prediction one — the relaunch is the near-term binary. Musk targets “early next week” for the retry; a clean Flight 13 that reaches its Starlink V3 deployment objective likely snaps the six-day losing streak and lets the stock reclaim its $135 IPO line, because the abort narrative reverses fastest when the very next attempt succeeds. A second scrub does the opposite, hardening the “priced for perfection, delivering delays” story that the sub-IPO price already reflects.

Prediction two — August earnings are the settlement date, and the bar is brutal. As one retail skeptic framed it, the market wants to see whether a company with “high dollar expenses” can justify the multiple when the first public earnings arrive. Expect the print to matter more than any launch: it will hand the market its first real number to anchor the $115-to-$800 spread, and the spread will compress hard toward whichever end the Starlink margin trajectory supports.

Prediction three — the analyst-versus-retail gap resolves toward the middle, not the extremes. The street’s $234 average will drift down as targets get marked to the tape, while the retail capitulation overshoots and creates the bounce; the likeliest 2026 path is a stock that spends months proving it deserves a number between Moffett’s $131 and Morgan Stanley’s $225, with each Starship flight a volatility event around that grind. SpaceX will keep being the most important private company to go public in a generation — and, for now, the clearest live experiment in what happens when a valuation built in the private markets has to be defended, launch by launch, in the public ones.

FAQ

Why did SpaceX stock (SPCX) fall below its IPO price?
SPCX slid below its $135 IPO price for the first time in mid-July 2026 and traded near $125 by July 17, down 18.5% since the June debut. A six-day losing streak, the aborted Starship Flight 13, and a broad view that the IPO priced in a multi-trillion-dollar valuation the revenue does not yet support all compounded the decline.

What is the bull case for SpaceX stock?
Raymond James’ $800 target is the extreme bull anchor (+398%), with a street average near $234–$244 implying more than 85% upside. The case rests on Starlink’s subscriber and revenue growth plus Starship optionality — reusable heavy-lift enabling everything from satellite deployment to lunar and Mars logistics.

What is the bear case for SpaceX stock?
CFRA’s $115 target (−31%) is the published bear floor. The thesis: a roughly $3 trillion implied valuation against Starlink revenue estimated near $50 billion is unjustifiable, index inclusion forces holders into idiosyncratic launch risk, and every Starship scrub now carries a financial penalty it never did privately.

What happened at the SpaceX Starship launch on July 16?
SpaceX aborted Starship Flight 13 before liftoff when four Super Heavy engines failed to ignite and the automatic safety system scrubbed the attempt. Elon Musk said two Raptor engines will be replaced and targeted a relaunch “early next week.” It was the first Starship test since the IPO.

Is SpaceX stock a buy after the drop?
Wall Street says yes — a Moderate-to-Strong Buy consensus with 24 Buys and ~87% average upside. The market disagrees, having pushed the price below every target but two. The $115-to-$800 spread means there is no consensus framework; the August earnings print and the Flight 13 relaunch are the near-term catalysts that will narrow it.

Does a launch abort really matter to SpaceX’s business?
Operationally, no — replacing two Raptor engines and reflying within days is routine, and pre-IPO these events carried no financial cost. The change is structural: as a Nasdaq-100 component, SpaceX now attaches a daily public price to a development culture built on rapid, visible failure, so aborts move the stock far more than they affect the underlying company.

What is SPCX’s price target range?
$115 (CFRA) to $800 (Raymond James), with a ~$234–$244 average across 32–37 analysts — a seven-fold spread, the widest in FinanceFeeds’ bull/bear series, reflecting deep disagreement over how to value a proven space monopoly with early public-market revenue disclosure.