The US stock market trades higher on Friday as SpaceX (SPCX) shares jump around 22% in the largest IPO on record. Improved consumer sentiment and hopes for Middle East peace add support.
However, technology lags the rally because the $75 billion SPCX listing siphons capital from space peers and mega-cap leaders.
How Are SpaceX Shares Trading After Record Debut?
SpaceX raised $75 billion by selling 556 million shares at $135 each, the biggest IPO in history. The stock opened at $150, well below the $175 level that trading desks initially indicated. Demand was strong, but cooler than the pre-debut hype implied.
Buyers then stepped in. SPCX touched a session high of $168.73 at press time before settling near $166, up around 22% and worth above $2 trillion.
The five-minute chart shows the rally thinning out. Price holds above the volume-weighted average price (VWAP) at $162.62, the volume-adjusted average institutions use as an execution benchmark.
However, cumulative volume delta (CVD), which tracks the running gap between buying and selling pressure, keeps trending down. Net volume sits near 384,000 shares and needs to reclaim the 1.1 million mark to confirm genuine demand.
Perpetual futures positioning tracked by Nansen signals caution. Shorting the listed stock is barely possible on the debut day, since shares have not settled and borrowing is scarce. That makes perps the only venue for bearish bets.
Whales hold a net short of $18.6 million and smart traders a net short of $7.2 million. This divergence could fuel a squeeze-like move on perps, or it may show experienced traders fading the rally.
The opening range breakout (ORB) indicator marks the high and low of a stock’s first minutes of trading. These levels act as breakout triggers.
A five-minute close above the $168.73 range high could open $173.95. On the downside, SPCX should not lose $155. Below that, the $149.77 range low sets up a move lower.
Why Is the US Stock Market Up Today?
Three forces explain the move.
1. SpaceX’s Record IPO Lifts Risk Appetite
A successful mega-listing signals investors will still fund growth at scale, and that confidence spills into the broader tape. The flip side is rotation.
Rocket Lab (RKLB) fell 9.36% and Tesla (TSLA) dropped 2.32% because holders sold existing space and Musk-linked exposure to fund SPCX positions.
2. Consumer Sentiment Beats Expectations
The University of Michigan’s preliminary June consumer sentiment index, which measures household confidence in finances and the economy, rose to 48.9 from 44.8.
Consumption accounts for roughly two-thirds of US output, so a stronger reading eases recession fears even though sentiment remains depressed.
3. Middle East Peace Hopes Cut the Risk Premium
Reports that the US and Iran are nearing an interim deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz pushed oil lower.
Cheaper energy reduces inflation risk and input costs, which benefits cyclicals and small caps the most.
What Happened to Major US Indexes?
- S&P 500: +0.39%
- Dow Jones: +0.58%
- Nasdaq: +0.12%
- Russell 2000: +1.16%
Small caps led because domestic cyclicals gain most from lower energy costs. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq lagged as the IPO drained flows from its largest members.
The S&P 500 trades near 7,423 after defending its 50-day exponential moving average (EMA) at 7,273. An EMA is a moving average that weights recent prices more heavily.
The index now battles the 20-day EMA at 7,422. A push above 7,459 would require only a 0.47% move and could open at 7,527 by the close, with 7,595 positioning the index for strength.
Losing 7,237 would bring the 100-day EMA near 7,098 into play. How SPCX shares trade from here matters because the index needs the debut to feed sentiment, not drain liquidity.
Which Sectors Are Holding Up?
Basic Materials leads at 2.20% because peace hopes improve global trade and commodity demand expectations. Financials gained 1.21% as JPMorgan (JPM) rose 2.04%.
Banks earn underwriting fees from the record listing, and a hot SpaceX shares’ IPO pipeline lifts deal revenue forecasts.
Energy added 1.11% as investors rotated into cheap cyclical groups that lagged last week.
Which Sectors Are Falling?
Consumer Cyclical dropped 1.10% as Amazon (AMZN) fell 2.14%, and Tesla slid. Healthcare slipped 0.17% because defensives lose appeal on risk-on days.
Technology rose just 0.38% and trailed the tape. Nvidia (NVDA) sat flat at 0.08% while Microsoft (MSFT) lost 0.65%. A $75 billion IPO absorbs cash, so funds trim their most liquid holdings, mega-cap tech, to pay for allocations.
The drain started early. Technology gained only 0.98% last week while Basic Materials rose 3.50%, showing money moved out before the debut.
Major Stock News Investors Are Watching
Adobe (ADBE) sank 6.62% after Wolfe Research and Stifel downgraded. Both flagged a weaker organic annual recurring revenue (ARR) outlook, the yearly value of subscription contracts, tied to its freemium push, and the CFO’s departure.
Arm Holdings (ARM) climbed around 9% after a Bank of America report sized the agentic AI opportunity at $170 billion. AMD rose 4.81% in sympathy as chip demand expectations improved.
What Are Investors Watching Next?
SPCX shares listed on the final session of the week, so Monday becomes the first test without debut-day mechanics, and today’s close sets next week’s tone. Traders will also watch which index baskets eventually add SPCX, since inclusion would force passive funds to buy.
Next week brings the FOMC meeting, the first rate decision under Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, plus fresh consumer confidence data. An SPCX hold above $166 with the S&P 500 above 7,422 hands bulls control into Monday.
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