Images of SpaceX (NASDAQ: Image of SPCX) participants have invested about $1.2 million property over the past year, according to Insider sales data.
Data which takes place between June 28, 2025, and June 27, 2026, shows one sale of SpaceX Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk.
The transaction involved the sale of 11,390 shares on April 2, 2026, at an average price of $105.32 per share, for a total value of $1,199,594.80.

The sale is notable because it occurred when SpaceX issued its June 2026 IPO, which sold shares at $135 each before the stock rose during its trading period.
Less commercial SpaceX
Available records show that Musk is the only SpaceX shareholder to sell stock in the past 12 months. No internal acquisitions or additional sales were disclosed at this time.
Of course, the sale price of $105.32 per share was below the IPO price and the current market cap, indicating that the deal was completed before the full acquisition of SpaceX’s market valuation.
SpaceX’s internal sales are often attractive Investor interest because the company’s management has direct knowledge of business operations. However, one loan does not mean that the trust in the company is weakened.
In the case of SpaceX, the statement seems small compared to the company’s market cap of about $2 trillion and does not indicate internal closure. The absence of much insider trading eases concerns about executives rushing out of office after going public.
As a result, the disclosures may not only affect SPCX’s financial position. Investors are more cautious when several executives sell a large portion of their assets for a short period of time, which has not been seen in recent SPCX trading events.
Changes in the price of SpaceX shares
As of press time, SPCX was trading at about $153 per share, well above its IPO price even though it had moved from a list price above $225.

The store initially expanded on the company’s high demand, pushing SpaceX’s valuation above $2 trillion.
Since then, the stock has been on the rise as investors reassess the company’s valuation, persistent losses, and capital expenditure requirements.
While internal sales may attract interest, SPCX’s near-term performance is expected to be driven by Starlink’s subscriber growth, startup activity, revenue streams, AI-related businesses, and a broader market focus on high-growth companies rather than a $1.2 million acquisition.





