You’ve seen the headlines everywhere. SpaceX, Elon Musk’s groundbreaking aerospace powerhouse, is on the cusp of going public this Friday, June 12, 2026, in what Bloomberg and other major outlets are calling potentially the largest IPO in Wall Street history. Targeting a staggering $2 trillion valuation (with reports of pricing at $135 per share to raise around $75 billion), SpaceX isn’t just another tech listing—it’s a seismic event that could reshape markets, ignite the space economy, and create unprecedented opportunities for savvy investors.
But here’s the critical insight most retail investors are missing: the real money won’t necessarily come from buying SpaceX shares on day one. The true windfalls are likely to flow to the smaller, under-the-radar companies in SpaceX’s vast ecosystem—the suppliers, partners, and specialized tech firms whose innovations and components make the giant’s ambitions possible. This is where history shows the biggest multipliers happen, often delivering returns 10x or more than the headline IPO itself.
That’s exactly why The Oxford Club is hosting The SpaceX IPO Summit on Wednesday, June 10, 2026, at 2:00 p.m. ET. Led by macroeconomic strategist Dr. Mark Skousen and Chief Investment Strategist Alexander Green, this free live event is your direct line to expert guidance on positioning ahead of the IPO. RSVP now to secure your spot and get exclusive access to their top recommendations, including one stock they both landed on independently using entirely different methodologies.
This isn’t just another webinar. It’s a strategic briefing designed to equip you with actionable intelligence so you can act swiftly—before Wall Street fully maps the supply chain and the hype fully peaks. With the IPO just 48 hours after the summit, time is of the essence. Claim your free ticket today and prepare to ride the wave.
SpaceX’s Journey from Startup to $2 Trillion Behemoth
To appreciate the opportunity, let’s first grasp what SpaceX represents. Founded by Elon Musk in 2002, SpaceX has transformed from a ambitious rocket startup into the dominant force in commercial spaceflight. Achievements include:
- Reusable Falcon 9 rockets that slashed launch costs dramatically.
- The Starlink satellite constellation, now providing high-speed internet to remote areas worldwide and generating substantial recurring revenue.
- Starship, the next-generation spacecraft aiming for Mars colonization and heavy-lift missions.
- Partnerships with NASA, the Department of Defense, and private enterprises.
By 2026, SpaceX’s valuation trajectory reflects explosive growth in satellite broadband, reusable launch vehicles, and the burgeoning space economy, projected to reach trillions in the coming decades. The IPO filing and roadshow have generated massive buzz, with the company planning to list under ticker SPCX on Nasdaq.
This debut dwarfs historical benchmarks: more than 3,000 times larger than Amazon’s IPO in scale and over 65 times Google’s. A $2 trillion company entering public markets means an enormous influx of institutional capital, analyst coverage, and retail interest. But as history repeatedly demonstrates, the primary beneficiary of such mega-events is often the supporting cast—the ecosystem players.
The Hidden Multiplier Effect: Why Suppliers and Partners Outperform the Giant
When a behemoth like SpaceX goes public, the capital flood doesn’t stop at its balance sheet. It cascades downstream. Investors and institutions pour money into anything connected to the growth story: components, materials, software, ground systems, and specialized services.
Consider the CoreWeave IPO precedent from last year. The company debuted at a $23 billion valuation and saw solid gains of over 100% in the following year. Yet its key power supplier partner, Bloom Energy, skyrocketed more than 1,000%—a 10x outperformance. Now scale that dynamic to SpaceX, which is roughly 20 times larger in this context. The potential for small orbit companies is immense.
This pattern repeats across industries:
- Skyworks Solutions (Apple’s chip supplier post-iPhone): +1,200% in 8 years.
- Astera Labs (tied to ARM’s IPO momentum): +600% in 18 months.
- Vertiv (powering Nvidia’s AI data centers): +1,000% in under two years.
- Carpenter Technology (specialty metals for SpaceX): +2,100% in 5 years.
These aren’t anomalies. They reflect how markets reward the enablers of breakthrough technologies once visibility increases. SpaceX relies on a complex web of suppliers for everything from advanced alloys and semiconductors to RF components and ground infrastructure. Publicly traded small-caps in this orbit stand to benefit disproportionately as contracts scale, visibility rises, and capital chases growth narratives.
Dr. Mark Skousen and Alexander Green have spent months dissecting this ecosystem. At the Summit, they’ll reveal six small companies they believe are best positioned, plus that one consensus “must-own” pick they arrived at separately—one using macroeconomic and supply-chain analysis, the other drawing on deep value and growth metrics. You’ll get the ticker and details for free simply by attending.
Who Are Dr. Mark Skousen and Alexander Green?

Dr. Mark Skousen is one of America’s leading macroeconomic strategists, a Ph.D. economist, former CIA analyst, and editor of The Skousen Report. Now serving as Macroeconomic Strategist for The Oxford Club, he brings a big-picture lens on inflation, geopolitics, productivity shifts, and capital flows. His track record spans 45 years of guiding investors through market cycles.
Alexander Green is Chief Investment Strategist at The Oxford Club and editor of The Oxford Communiqué, Microcap Trader, and The Insider Alert. With over 16 years as an advisor and a focus on high-conviction growth and income strategies, Alex has helped thousands of investors build wealth through disciplined, research-driven approaches.
This is their first joint portfolio effort—a rare collaboration that underscores the conviction behind these SpaceX-orbit picks. Their independent convergence on one stock is a powerful signal you won’t want to miss.
Deep Dive into the Space Economy: The Multi-Trillion-Dollar Opportunity
The broader context amplifies everything. The global space economy is booming, driven by falling launch costs, satellite megaconstellations, space tourism, defense applications, and commercial infrastructure. Starlink alone aims for millions of users, creating demand for terminals, chips, power systems, and more.
Key sectors for suppliers include:
- Advanced Materials: Specialty metals and composites for rockets and re-entry vehicles (e.g., examples like Carpenter Technology and Materion).
- Semiconductors and RF Tech: Chips for satellites and ground stations (e.g., STMicroelectronics with billions of units shipped).
- Power and Infrastructure: Solutions for energy demands in space and on ground.
- Manufacturing and Components: Precision parts, PCBs, amplifiers.
As SpaceX scales Starship flights, Starlink deployments, and potential Mars missions, these partners gain volume, credibility, and new contracts. Post-IPO analyst coverage will likely highlight these relationships, driving re-ratings and multiple expansion for small-caps.
Historical Parallels: Learning from Tech Titans’ Supply Chain Winners
Let’s expand on those examples with more context. When Apple launched the iPhone, it didn’t just reward itself; suppliers like Skyworks saw transformative growth as component demand exploded. Similarly, ARM’s IPO and Nvidia’s AI surge lifted infrastructure plays like Astera Labs and Vertiv far beyond the leaders.
In the Musk ecosystem, EchoStar’s spectrum deal with SpaceX turned a $21 stock into $135 in a year (+543%). These stories illustrate a repeatable thesis: bet on the picks-and-shovels providers during infrastructure buildouts.
The SpaceX IPO Summit will connect these dots specifically to SpaceX, offering not just names but the why—revenue exposure, competitive moats, valuation upside, and timing.
What to Expect at The SpaceX IPO Summit (June 10, 2 PM ET)
This live event is packed with value:
- Detailed analysis of the IPO’s market impact.
- Presentation of the six small SpaceX-orbit stocks.
- The reveal of the consensus must-own ticker.
- Q&A and strategic timing advice (act before June 12).
- Insights into the Musk economy (Tesla, Starlink, xAI synergies).
After registering, upgrade to VIP for free and unlock:
- Space Economy Primer Report: In-depth list of top suppliers and past winners.
- Exclusive text reminders and prep series.
- Early replay access.
VIP costs $0—pure upside for dedicated attendees.

Risk Management and Long-Term Perspective
While the potential is exciting, all investments carry risk. Small-caps can be volatile. These recommendations are based on thorough research, but markets are unpredictable. The Summit emphasizes informed positioning, diversification, and a long-term horizon aligned with space industry tailwinds.
The Oxford Club’s philosophy prioritizes independent, contrarian thinking—perfect for navigating hype cycles around mega-IPOs.
Why This Event Matters Urgently Right Now
With the IPO pricing potentially on June 11 and trading June 12, the window is narrow. Attending the Summit on June 10 gives you expert-vetted ideas when they matter most—before the broader market catches on fully.
Past attendees of Oxford Club events have praised the clarity, actionability, and community. This one could be among the most timely.
Expanding the Vision: SpaceX’s Broader Impact on Innovation and Investment
Beyond immediate suppliers, consider downstream effects: increased demand for launch services boosts related tech; Starlink expansion drives rural connectivity plays; national security applications open defense contractor opportunities. The entire aerospace and satellite value chain stands to benefit.
Economists like Dr. Skousen will likely touch on macroeconomic enablers—lower interest rates, innovation incentives, geopolitical competition in space—that could sustain this boom for years.
Building Your Portfolio Strategy Around the IPO
Successful investors combine:
- Core holdings in established players.
- Satellite exposure via small-caps.
- Risk management (position sizing, stops).
- Ongoing monitoring post-event.
The Summit provides the foundation; your action completes it.
The Oxford Club Difference: Fellowship, Education, and Results
For decades, The Oxford Club has empowered members with exclusive research, global networking, and principled investing. This Summit exemplifies that mission—democratizing insights typically reserved for institutions.
The SpaceX IPO Summit: Secure Your Free Spot Today
Don’t watch from the sidelines as the SpaceX IPO reshapes fortunes. RSVP for The SpaceX IPO Summit now and join Dr. Mark Skousen and Alexander Green on June 10 at 2 p.m. ET. Get the free ticker reveal, six stock ideas, and the tools to potentially profit from one of the decade’s biggest wealth-creation events.
Spots are limited for this high-demand event. Claim yours immediately and take the first step toward positioning in the right stocks ahead of the bell.
The future of space is launching—make sure your portfolio is on board.






























