The SpaceX IPO opened on June 12, with the company targeting a valuation above $1.7 trillion at the New York opening bell.
Traders now have two distinct routes to gain exposure: purchasing actual SpaceX equity or trading the SPCX perpetual contract on Hyperliquid.
Each instrument operates under different mechanics, carries different rights, and suits different trader profiles. Understanding those differences is critical before making any capital commitment.
Buying SpaceX stock at IPO gives investors direct ownership over real company equity. Shareholders receive primary-market IPO allocations and retain voting rights where the company grants them.
Any future dividends SpaceX distributes would flow exclusively to equity holders, not derivative traders. That ownership structure creates a fundamentally different relationship between the investor and the business.
Leverage, however, is not a standard feature of purchasing equity through traditional channels. Before the IPO, access to real SpaceX shares was entirely restricted to accredited investors and institutions.
Retail traders had no direct path to the stock during the pre-IPO period. That gating pushed speculative demand toward crypto-native alternatives in the weeks leading up to the listing.
SpaceX also brings a notable Bitcoin treasury to public markets. The company holds 18,712 BTC, making it the eighth-largest publicly traded Bitcoin treasury firm after its IPO.
Equity investors therefore gain indirect Bitcoin exposure through the company’s balance sheet. That detail adds another layer to the investment profile worth considering.
For traders with a long-term outlook, traditional equity remains the more straightforward choice. Real shareholders accumulate rights over time that no synthetic instrument can replicate.
The SPCX perpetual contract, deployed by TradeXYZ on Hyperliquid’s HIP-3 upgrade, gave retail traders pre-IPO price discovery access ahead of the listing.
As Arkham research noted, the contract allowed users to take long or short positions on the implied SpaceX share price.
Traders could speculate on price movements before the stock officially opened on public markets. That early access, however, came with a visible pricing premium attached.
At the time of publication, the SPCX perpetual implied a SpaceX valuation of roughly $2.3 trillion. That figure is materially higher than the actual IPO target valuation of $1.7 trillion.
The gap could reflect anticipated Day 1 price appreciation, a premium for early access, or speculative positioning. Traders should not interpret that premium as a reliable signal of where the stock will actually trade.
Holding a SPCX contract confers no ownership over real SpaceX equity whatsoever. Active positions also do not convert into actual stock once the IPO completes.
After the listing, those positions transition into standard stock-linked perpetual futures. That structure allows derivative traders to capture post-IPO price movements while still using leverage.
Liquidation risk remains a serious concern for leveraged SPCX positions. A flash crash driven by low liquidity or technical issues could wipe out an entire position rapidly.
Traders with lower risk tolerance should weigh that possibility carefully against the appeal of early access and leverage.
The post SpaceX Stock vs. SPCX Perpetual Contract: What Every Trader Must Know Before Buying appeared first on Blockonomi.


