Initial Trading Dynamics and Option Strategies
Given the massive demand ahead of the June 12th listing, we expect an initial, violent move to the upside. Pre-IPO gray market data shows indicative bids hitting as high as $180, a significant premium to the $135 offering price, confirming the queue to get in is long. Our immediate focus should be on capturing this initial pop, as retail demand and the fear of missing out will likely overwhelm any fundamental concerns in the first few days of trading. Implied volatility for the first listed options will be extraordinarily high, with early indications suggesting IV could exceed 150% for the first monthly expiration. This makes selling premium exceptionally risky, but it also means outright call or put purchases will be expensive. We see opportunities in defined-risk strategies like call spreads to play the initial run-up while capping our cost basis against the inevitable volatility crush.Index Inclusion, Institutional Activity, and Medium-Term Strategy
The key catalyst to watch after the IPO is the forced buying from index funds. Nasdaq’s fast-entry rule means passive funds tracking the NASDAQ-100 will be mandated to buy the stock around early July, providing a predictable wave of demand regardless of price. A recent Bank of America survey noted that while most institutional investors expect the stock to rise post-IPO, over half see it as fundamentally overvalued and plan to sell within six months, suggesting they will use this index-inclusion liquidity to exit. We’ve seen this pattern before, most notably with Tesla’s S&P 500 inclusion in late 2020, where the stock peaked almost to the day the index buying was completed. The SpaceX calendar is structured so the first insider lockups expire shortly after the first earnings report in August, right as passive demand is being filled. This sets up a scenario where the most informed sellers can begin distributing their shares into a market that has just absorbed its largest price-insensitive buyers. Our strategy is therefore two-phased. In the immediate term, we will look to profit from the initial surge and the run-up into index inclusion, likely using call options that expire in July. Subsequently, we will prepare to pivot, looking at put options dated for late August and beyond to position for the dynamic shift when structural buying fades and insider selling begins.Start trading now — click here to create your real VT Markets account.