From Scarcity Trade to Valuation Discipline: SpaceX’s Pullback Tests OpenAI’s IPO Ambition
OpenAI is reportedly leaning toward delaying its IPO until 2027, but the sharper market signal is coming from SpaceX. SpaceX closed down 16.4% at $154.60 on June 22, down 31.5% from its $225.64 intraday high, though still 14.5% above its $135 IPO price. That move turned SpaceX from a clean scarcity-driven IPO success into the first major public-market stress test for the AI-adjacent mega-listing cycle.
OpenAI’s issue is not demand, but price. Reuters, citing The New York Times, reported that OpenAI is considering waiting until 2027 to preserve a valuation target of up to $1 trillion, while advisers have framed the choice as either waiting for that valuation or going public sooner at a lower target.
Prediction markets are already reflecting that caution. Polymarket’s OpenAI IPO market recently showed roughly one-in-four odds for an OpenAI IPO by Dec. 31, 2026, signaling that traders no longer see a near-term listing as the clear base case. For crypto traders, that makes AI pre-IPO exposure less of a one-way scarcity trade and more of a valuation-discipline trade tied to public-market benchmarks.
2026/06/29