Global Markets
SpaceX Stumbles in First Major Post-IPO Test: Starship V3 Engine Failure and Stock Plunge
724FinanceDr. Yaman Ege

Space technology giant SpaceX delivered a significant setback to support its stock performance following the largest IPO in history, as the upgraded Starship V3 rocket was automatically aborted moments after ignition at its Texas complex, triggered by engine failures.
Post-IPO Jolts Shake Investor Confidence
Following a monumental public debut on June 12 that raised over $85 billion, SpaceX now faces a development that rattles investor confidence. The company's shares closed below the $135 IPO price, sinking more than 4% in after-hours trading following the scrubbed launch.Stalling the "Orbital Data Centers" Ambition
This launch attempt was not merely a rocket test but a pivotal step in SpaceX's strategy to prove the economic viability of "orbital data centers." The mission aimed to deploy third-generation Starlink satellites, which constitute the company's largest revenue generator and its only profitable business segment.From my perspective as Dr. Yaman Ege, SpaceX's failure here is not just a space engineering hurdle but a signal of the fragility within high-tech supply chains. The deployment of orbital data centers is a critical precursor to moving future semiconductor and AI processing capacity into space. The sudden failure in Raptor engines serves as a stark reminder to investors that stochastic assembly errors in complex systems, even with the most advanced protocols, can evaporate billions in market value in seconds. The space-based infrastructure strategies of Nvidia and other chip giants remain directly tethered to SpaceX's operational stability.