News reports suggested that E*Trade would be in charge of selling IPO shares to individual investors. And Robinhood and SoFi would be cut out of the deal.
There was a mini-panic in the SpaceX IPO world yesterday. | Honestly, I'm not waiting for the confidential IPO prospectus that's expected later this week. I'm rushing to secure my position right now – at a huge discount. | Go here to claim SpaceX Pre-IPO shares today. | On Monday, Reuters and CNBC reported that Morgan Stanley's E*Trade was in talks to take the lead in selling SpaceX shares to individual investors. And that Robinhood and SoFi were potentially being cut out of the deal altogether. | For anyone hoping to buy SpaceX at the IPO price through their Robinhood or SoFi account, that was not welcome news. | By Tuesday morning, Elon Musk cleared things up. He posted on X: "These reports are false." | Musk's post suggests that clients at E*Trade, Robinhood, and SoFi may have chance buy shares in the SpaceX Initial Public Offering. | Here's the broader picture worth understanding. | SpaceX is considering setting aside up to 30% of its shares for retail investors — roughly three times the typical IPO allocation. | That 30% isn't all going to self-directed individual investors. A significant portion of that allocation is expected to go to private wealth and high-net-worth clients served by the underwriting banks. E*Trade, Robinhood, and SoFi want to offer SpaceX IPO shares to individual investor clients. | So even in the best-case scenario for retail investors, the actual pool of shares available to someone with a standard brokerage account is considerably smaller than the 30% headline suggests. | Bank of America is expected to focus on family offices and high-net-worth investors, while Morgan Stanley would use E*Trade to reach smaller individual investors. UBS is lined up for international distribution, and Citigroup for institutional and international retail clients. | Here's what we know about the timing. | SpaceX may file its IPO prospectus confidentially as early as this week. But once filed, investors should expect to wait another couple of months before the public prospectus is released — putting the actual IPO date on or before Elon Musk's June 28 birthday. | Go here to claim a stake – before it starts trading. | Ian Wyatt Editor, IPO Watch |
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