Market participants had spent weeks bracing for the SpaceX debut, haunted by the memory of the 2012 Facebook listing, where technical glitches caused hours of chaos and significant financial losses. This time, the infrastructure proved resilient. Exchanges, clearinghouses, and underwriters coordinated extensive stress tests to ensure systems could absorb the unprecedented volume. Charles Schwab alone reported handling over one million orders within the first few hours of trading.
Wall Street clears SpaceX debut, setting blueprint for future mega IPOs
The record-breaking Nasdaq launch of SpaceX proceeded without the technical failures that historically plagued massive public offerings, providing a successful template for the upcoming listings of OpenAI and Anthropic. Wall Street firms processed millions of orders, successfully navigating the highest retail activity ever recorded for an IPO auction.
Morgan Stanley served as the stabilization agent, managing the opening price and curbing potential volatility. Despite the immense demand, the stock experienced a relatively controlled start, trading shortly before noon. Jeff Parks, CEO of Stack Capital Group, credited the smooth rollout to rigorous preparation and clear communication from the SpaceX team. Nasdaq CEO Adena Friedman echoed this sentiment, describing the collaboration between banking partners and the exchange as flawless. While minor disruptions occurred on the Robinhood platform, the broader financial ecosystem avoided the systemic breakdowns that once defined high-profile trading fiascos.




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