The majority of Wall Street’s response when SpaceX shares fell more than 16% in a single trading day, wiping off around $400 billion in market value in a matter of hours, ranged from shock to a calm acknowledgement that this was, in some ways, anticipated. The corporation reported operating losses of more than $5 billion the year before, but it momentarily surpassed a valuation of $2.5 trillion, which is more than all of the major European banks put together. There was no hiding the math. Simply put, investors had opted for a different schedule.
Anyone who witnessed the early internet boom or the initial wave of investment in electric vehicles will recognize how the space industry has drawn cash based on promise. Real businesses with enduring worth were created throughout both of those eras. When it became impossible to explain the discrepancy between predicted revenue and actual earnings, both also produced significant revisions. Right now, the space sector is somewhere in that similar corridor; it has moved past the merely speculative stage but is still regarded as though it has already reached steady profitability.
The most obvious example is SpaceX. The valuation of the greatest initial public offering (IPO) in Wall Street history was based almost completely on trust in Elon Musk’s long-term vision rather than on present earnings. The economics of reusable rockets are quite appealing, and Starlink is making real money. However, there is still a huge discrepancy between the company’s earnings and its paper value, and this discrepancy is susceptible to the same kind of single-session correction that has already occurred.
Different variations of the same problem are faced by other businesses in the industry. With a $46.7 billion market capitalization that reflects actual demand from the expanding commercial satellite industry, Rocket Lab has established a respectable business centered around orbital launches and spacecraft components. With a $19.6 billion valuation, AST SpaceMobile is developing a space-based cellular network that links directly to regular cellphones. This is an intriguing concept, but it does not yet have the revenue foundation to support that amount by any common metric. These businesses are not dishonest. These are businesses whose valuations are based on a future that might not materialize at the time investors anticipate.
Lockheed Martin belongs to a completely other group. With a 2.70% dividend yield, decades of steady revenue from defense contracts, and a valuation of $116.4 billion, it provides what pure-play space equities lack: the capacity to weather a difficult year without a bond issuance. For investors who have seen high-growth space equities rise 16% in a single session, stability is beginning to sound more appealing, even though it comes at the expense of the kind of explosive upside that the SpaceX narrative offers.
The supply of shares is the structural problem that hasn’t been properly factored in yet. Lock-up times run out. Investors in institutions rebalance. Profits go to early backers. The factors that influenced the IPO value will be put to the test as more SpaceX shares hit the open market by real selling pressure from investors who have been holding for years and are now considering whether to stay. Seldom does that process take place in silence.

There is something noteworthy about the current situation. There is a space economy. Satellites are being launched. Broadband is expanding to previously unheard-of levels. There is real long-term value to the infrastructure being constructed. It’s unclear, though, if the estimates given to that infrastructure today really represent its current value or what someone believes it will be worth in twenty years. Every investor in this industry ought to pose that question more clearly than the majority do at the moment.
