
(SeaPRwire) – By: Lucas Caldwell
We are watching a financial singularity unfold in real time. SpaceX just swallowed Amazon’s market cap in three days of trading. It briefly eclipsed Microsoft too. This isn’t valuation; it is a cultural event weaponized by stock tickers. The market has decided physics matters less than vibes. A thirty-one-year-old retail giant got bent over by a rocket maker that loses billions. Gravity is currently a suggestion, not a law. The numbers are hallucinations, but the money is real.
Elon Musk is now worth $1.27 trillion. He made $165 billion on Tuesday alone. That is more than Warren Buffett made in his entire career. Meanwhile, SpaceX took in $18.7 billion in revenue last year. It lost $4.9 billion. Amazon made $77.7 billion in profit. The math does not work. They bought Cursor for more than they spent on rockets. It is a conglomerate of chaos. Rockets, Starlink, xAI, X, and now vibe-coding are all one entity.
Retail investors dumped $225 million into SpaceX in two days. That is seventy-five percent of all single-stock buying. Only four percent of shares are free. The rest are locked up. Passive funds need to buy $22 billion to $27 billion. There is nothing to sell. Options volume hit 600,000 contracts in an hour. Traders are betting on $250 calls. Dealers are forced to buy to hedge. It is the GameStop mechanism firing on thrusters.
Jim Cramer called it a memestock. He is right, but he misses the structural shift. This is not just a rocket company. It is a bet on a fourth industrial revolution. Dan Ives sees the revolution. CFRA sees a sell rating with a $115 target. The gap between perception and reality is a canyon. Musk claims $1 trillion revenue by 2030. He lost $4.28 billion last quarter. The clock is ticking on those S-1 projections.
The entity is a chimera. X folded into xAI, which merged into SpaceX. Now Cursor is bolted on. It holds social networks, AI labs, and launch vehicles. If this works, it redefines the economy. If it fails, the bag holders will be legion. Steve Westly says investors get grumpy after four quarters. The supply shock is artificial. The demand is mania. When the lock-up expires, the floor drops out.
Gravity always wins, and the re-entry burn will destroy the latecomers.
Author bio: Lucas Caldwell, a tech opinion leader with millions of followers on X/Twitter.
