Space stocks are on a recent rally following the Memorial Day holiday, fueled by enthusiasm surrounding SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO), which was formally filed last week. Retail traders are rushing into space stocks and ETFs ahead of an estimated trillion-dollar IPO, with investors trying to find beneficiaries and proxies for what could be the largest initial public offering in history. Although the number of publicly traded space-focused companies is limited, enthusiasm is growing among individual investors who want a piece of the space economy. The VanEck Space ETF (WARP) is up 24% in just five days, with holdings like Rocket Lab Corp., Planet Labs, Firefly Aerospace, and Intuitive Machines soaring. The Procure Space ETF (UFO) is up about 65% since the beginning of the year and more than 100% in the past six months. Analysts say SpaceX’s “monopoly” position in the global launch field could make space companies the direct and indirect beneficiaries of an IPO, providing momentum for a wide range of space-related companies. “The launch segment has a ‘monopoly’ market share. SpaceX maintains overwhelming leadership in the on-orbit mass-to-orbit space,” Rohit Kulkarni, a senior analyst at Ross, said in a note Tuesday. “A high degree of vertical integration facilitates cost advantages and rapid iteration.” Beneficiaries and Agents Wall Street is witnessing an “IPO premium” that is pushing up not only SpaceX’s suppliers and partner companies, but even its competitors. Launch company Rocket Lab is among the companies looking to take advantage of the tailwind, having last week won a $90 million contract with the U.S. Space Force to build and operate a pair of geostationary satellites. “As a direct competitor to SpaceX, we view[Rocket Lab]as well-positioned to benefit from the ‘SpaceX IPO premium,’ which we believe benefits other well-positioned space companies,” Cantor Fitzgerald analysts said in a note Tuesday. WARP 5D Mountain VanEck Space ETF (WARP), 5th Kantar rates space hardware maker Intuitive Machines Overweight, calling the company a “direct beneficiary” of the IPO. Analysts said satellite maker Satellig is tying its growth strategy to SpaceX. This can have both short- and long-term benefits. “Satelogic has de-risked and industrialized constellation deployments by tightly tying its scale-up strategy to the SpaceX and Falcon 9 rideshare ecosystems,” wrote Andres Shepard and Anand Balaji in Kantar in February. “Strategically speaking, SpaceX is not a competitive threat here, but rather an enabler that allows Satellogic to scale faster and more cheaply than its peers without incurring any launch risk.”Rocket Lab is up more than 78% since the beginning of the year. Intuitive Machines is up over 110% year-to-date, and Satellogic is up over 440%. All of SpaceX’s direct suppliers, from specialty metal manufacturers to semiconductor makers to radio hardware manufacturers, stand to benefit from an IPO, analysts say. “Any company that supplies parts for the Falcon is well-positioned to benefit from an upcoming IPO,” one Wall Street analyst told CNBC Tuesday morning. More companies join the vapor trail Analysts see a variety of SpaceX-related strategies for individual investors, but single out hardware and infrastructure builders for the retail industry. “Retail investors appear to be increasingly focused on ‘pick and drop’ space names rather than directly launched competitors,” Vanda analysts said in a note last week. “Retail demand is growing in smaller, more speculative space names such as Sidus Space, Satellik, and Planet Labs, strengthening the breadth of retail interest across the space trade beyond more established agency names.” Aerospace manufacturer Redwire (RDW), which accounts for about 5% of the VanEck Space ETF, is riding “tailwinds from the space and defense sector,” according to a March note from Trust Securities’ Michael Charmoli. The stock is up more than 130% in the past month and more than 60% in the past five days. “Following the acquisition of Edge Autonomy in 2025, RDW has transitioned from a pure space company to a multi-domain provider of diversified defense technologies delivering next-generation capabilities,” Chalmoli said, calling this “an initiative that took place under the radar.” ASTS SpaceMobile is a satellite and communications company with a launch contract with SpaceX and is one of the top stocks in investment bank Goldman Sachs’ Retail Stocks Basket (GSXURFAV). “This basket of stocks, popular with retail traders, is up 29% (since mid-April),” Goldman’s Daniel Chavez wrote in a May 13 note to clients. WARP’s other holding company, EchoStar Corp., owns about 2% of SpaceX stock, leading investors to think of it as an agency. “Echostar is increasingly a bet on SpaceX,” Michael Hodel wrote in Morningstar in March. Shares were flat in Tuesday morning trading, up 2% for the month but more than 75% over the past six months.
