Virgin Galactic (SPCE) Soars 300% as SpaceX IPO Excitement Ignites Space Stock Rally

Table of Contents Shares of Virgin Galactic soared to $8.90 during Monday’s trading session, establishing a new 52-week peak as enthusiasm surrounding the upcoming SpaceX IPO lifted the entire space industry sector. Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc., SPCE The stock has now surged more than 300% from its 2026 floor, driving the company’s market capitalization toward the $700 million threshold. Across the space industry, momentum has accelerated dramatically. Rocket Lab, Planet Labs, and Intuitive Machines have experienced comparable upward movements as market participants position themselves for what many anticipate will be a historic public offering. SpaceX’s anticipated listing carries an expected valuation exceeding $1.78 trillion. On Polymarket, speculators are wagering the company’s post-IPO valuation could surpass $2 trillion. This wave of optimism is cascading through smaller space sector participants—with Virgin Galactic emerging as one of the primary beneficiaries. Recent regulatory filings amplified Monday’s price action. RichRich Capital revealed ownership of 4.87 million shares, representing a 4.6% stake in the company. Separately, Rich Huang filed disclosure of 5.58 million shares, equivalent to a 5.3% holding. Given that Huang maintains control over RichRich Capital, his aggregate ownership reaches 9.9% of the company. Such substantial ownership disclosures typically generate investor interest and scrutiny. Virgin Galactic recently announced an increase in spaceflight pricing to $750,000 per passenger—representing a $100,000 premium over previous rates. The organization is preparing for commercial flight operations to commence later this year, with expectations for accelerated flight frequency thereafter. VSS Unity, the company’s prototype vehicle, has resumed flight testing operations above Spaceport America in New Mexico. Glide testing for the first next-generation spacecraft is scheduled for the third quarter, followed by powered test flights reaching space in the fourth quarter. The next-generation fleet is engineered to support twice-weekly operations with mission longevity exceeding 500 flights per vehicle. The latest quarterly report revealed a net loss of $65 million, showing improvement compared to the $84 million loss from the corresponding period in the previous year. Adjusted EBITDA loss totaled $55 million, down from $72 million year-over-year. The company concluded the quarter holding $251 million in cash and short-term investments. Management raised $52 million during the last quarter through at-the-market equity offerings—a capital-raising mechanism that may be deployed again given the stock’s current elevation. The Relative Strength Index currently registers at 90, indicating deeply overbought conditions. From a technical standpoint, the stock appears to be in the markup phase of the Wyckoff cycle, which historically precedes distribution phases and subsequent corrections. While a move toward $10 appears feasible in the immediate term, Wall Street analysts maintain considerably more reserved outlooks. The consensus rating stands at Hold, derived from two Buy recommendations, three Hold ratings, and one Sell rating issued over the past three months. The average analyst price target sits at $3.61—suggesting potential downside exceeding 50% from current trading levels.