SpaceX IPO 2026: Everything You Need To Know as a Bangladeshi

Dan Akeju

Dan Akeju
June 12, 2026

As of 12 June 2026, SpaceX trades on the Nasdaq, the New York based stock exchange that hosts most large American technology companies, under the ticker SPCX after pricing the largest initial public offering in history at $135 per share. As a Bangladeshi, you can buy this stock, but only if your money already sits legally in foreign currency, because Bangladesh's exchange control rules do not let you convert taka and send it abroad for share purchases.

The company raised $75 billion in the offering. Notably, that figure is more than triple the $25.6 billion raised by Saudi Aramco, the Saudi state oil company that held the previous IPO record from 2019. According to a 2026 Reuters report on the SpaceX IPO pricing, total investor demand reached $250 billion, which made the offering nearly four times oversubscribed.

This guide answers every question you should be asking before you touch SPCX, specifically: what the IPO is, what one share costs in taka, what the company actually owns, why experienced investors are worried, whether you can legally buy it from Bangladesh, how the process works step by step, and what risks are hiding in the fine print. One of those risks involves a single letter ticker mistake that has already cost careless buyers real money. Let's start with the basics.

What Is the SpaceX IPO?

The SpaceX IPO is the first public sale of shares in Space Exploration Technologies Corp, which listed on the Nasdaq on 12 June 2026 under the ticker SPCX at $135 per share. According to Investopedia, the financial education publisher, an initial public offering is the process through which a private corporation offers its shares to the public for the first time through a new stock issuance. In other words, a company that was previously owned by founders and private investors becomes one that anyone with a brokerage account can own.

The numbers behind this particular listing are historic. As of 12 June 2026, SpaceX has issued 555.56 million shares at $135 each, raising $75 billion and valuing the company at $1.77 trillion. Consequently, SpaceX entered the market as roughly the 7th largest publicly listed company in the United States. For scale, $1.77 trillion is more than four times the entire annual GDP of Bangladesh, which stood at around $437 billion in 2024.

Demand for the shares ran far beyond supply. Think of it like Eid train tickets from Kamalapur: far more people queued for shares than there were shares to sell, and therefore most buyers received only a fraction of what they requested.

However, demand and size only tell you the stock exists. The first practical question for you is what a single share actually costs in your own currency.

How Much Does One SPCX Share Cost in Taka?

As of 11 June 2026, one SPCX share at $135 costs roughly 16,600 Bangladeshi taka, based on the interbank exchange rate of about 123 taka per US dollar. The exchange rate of the taka against the dollar is determined through interbank transactions in the domestic foreign exchange market, and as of June 2026 the rate sits at 123.00 after the taka weakened 0.65% over the past 12 months.

For context, 16,600 taka is close to the monthly minimum wage of a Bangladeshi garment worker. That comparison matters because it tells you SPCX is not a casual purchase for most people earning in taka, and it should reframe how you think about position size.

Fortunately, you do not necessarily need the full 16,600 taka equivalent. According to Investopedia, a fractional share is a portion of one full share of stock, typically created when brokers split whole shares to make expensive stocks accessible. For example, several international brokers let you buy $10 or $20 worth of a US stock rather than one whole unit.

Accordingly, the real entry barrier for you is not the share price at all. The real barrier is moving money legally, which a later section covers in detail.

First, though, you should understand what you would actually be buying. Because the SpaceX of 2026 is a very different business from the rocket company you remember.

What Exactly Does SPCX Own?

SPCX is a combined entity that includes the SpaceX launch business, the Starlink satellite internet network, the xAI artificial intelligence unit, the X social media platform, and a growing data centre operation.

Previously, these were separate ventures. Subsequently, a February 2026 merger between SpaceX and xAI, the artificial intelligence company Elon Musk founded in 2023, folded them into one entity with a combined baseline valuation of $1.25 trillion before the IPO pushed it higher.

There are 4 main business lines inside SPCX:

  1. Space launch: As of 2026, SpaceX handles 82% of all US space launches and 45% of global commercial space contracts. However, the company's own filings value space launch at only about 1.6% of its claimed total addressable market.
  2. Starlink: Starlink is SpaceX's satellite based internet service that beams broadband from low Earth orbit. According to a 2026 Fierce Network report on Starlink's subscriber disclosures, the service reached 10.3 million paid subscribers across 164 countries in Q1 2026, generating roughly $66 per subscriber each month and $3.26 billion in quarterly connectivity revenue.
  3. AI infrastructure: The Colossus 1 data centre, completed in March 2026, signed a compute contract with Anthropic, the AI developer behind the Claude models, worth $1.25 billion per month through mid 2029. According to a 2026 BitMEX Research breakdown on the SpaceX S-1, this contract can be cancelled after November 2026 with 90 days notice, which means the revenue is large but cancellable rather than locked in.
  4. X and Grok: The social media platform and the Grok AI model came along with the xAI merger, plus a balance sheet holding $770 million in bitcoin as of the May 2026 filing.

The company's prospectus claims a total addressable market of $28.5 trillion, including $870 billion for satellite broadband and $2.4 trillion for AI infrastructure.

Notably, that $28.5 trillion figure is roughly equal to the entire annual economic output of the United States, which tells you how ambitious the framing is.

So the company is enormous, the demand was enormous, and the story is compelling. Nevertheless, the financials tell a much darker story, and the people who read them closely are worried.

Why Are Serious Investors Worried About the Valuation?

Serious investors are worried because SpaceX priced at roughly 95 times its 2025 revenue while losing billions of dollars per year, a multiple that almost no profitable company in history has sustained. For comparison, even the most expensive mega cap technology companies rarely trade above 30 times sales.

There are 3 specific financial concerns in the S-1 filing:

  1. Persistent losses: SpaceX posted a $2.6 billion loss in 2025, and its operating loss reached $1.9 billion in early 2026.
  2. Heavy cash burn: As of Q1 2026, the company has burned roughly $30 billion in cash over the past four quarters. At that pace, the entire $75 billion IPO raise lasts about 2.5 years. Specifically, the AI unit alone spent $12.7 billion on capital expenditure in 2025 and another $7.7 billion in just Q1 2026.
  3. Historical precedent: Companies that listed at similarly extreme valuations have typically lost around half their value within three years of their IPO.

According to a 2026 Guardian analysis on the SpaceX flotation, analysts openly fear the company is overvalued relative to any conventional measure of its earning power.

Community sentiment echoes this concern. r/investing is one of the largest stock market discussion forums on Reddit, the American social discussion platform, with millions of members who analyse company filings together.

Discussions within r/investing in June 2026 report investors comparing Starlink to established telecom operators, because China Mobile, the most valuable telecom company in the world, carries a market capitalisation of only around $240 billion. Therefore, if Starlink is fundamentally a telecom business, the comparison implies SPCX is priced at more than seven times the value of the largest telecom on earth.

Retail sentiment data adds another layer. According to a 2026 EIN Presswire release on Adanos retail sentiment data, retail investors were quietly turning bearish on SpaceX even as order volumes broke records. In other words, people were buying while privately doubting.

Meanwhile, the prediction markets point the other way. Polymarket is a platform where traders bet real money on the probability of future events. According to a 2026 CNBC review on market sentiment, Polymarket traders placed a 69% probability on SpaceX closing above a $2 trillion market capitalisation on day one, and pre-IPO futures implied a 20% first day pop.

How can a stock be simultaneously feared and fought over? Ultimately, the answer sits in one man's hands, and it is the single biggest risk factor in the entire prospectus.

How Much Control Does Elon Musk Have Over SPCX?

As of the June 2026 listing, Elon Musk controls between 82% and 85% of SPCX's total voting power through Class B supervoting shares, which means ordinary shareholders have effectively no say in how the company is run. Supervoting shares are a special class of stock that carries multiple votes per share, while the Class A shares sold to the public carry one vote each.

Accordingly, Musk names most of the board directors, and you would need to own at least 3% of the company before you could even submit a shareholder proposal.

The practical meaning is blunt. The only person who can remove Musk as CEO is Musk himself. Therefore, when you buy SPCX, you are not buying a company in the traditional sense. You are buying a ticket to ride along with whatever Musk decides to do next across SpaceX, xAI, X, and his other ventures.

This structure attracted political attention before trading even began. Elizabeth Warren, the US Senator from Massachusetts known for financial regulation advocacy, released a public letter to the SEC demanding a halt to the IPO, citing corporate governance concerns. Nevertheless, the listing went ahead.

However, concentrated control creates a second problem that the first one hides. If everything depends on one man, what happens when something happens to that man?

What Happens to SPCX If Something Happens to Elon Musk?

SPCX carries extreme key-man risk, meaning a large share of the company's value is tied to Elon Musk personally, and any event that removes or distracts him could move the stock violently.

According to Investopedia, key person risk refers to the risk a business faces when its success depends heavily on one individual.

SpaceX's own prospectus lists its dependence on Musk among its risk factors, which is standard disclosure, but the degree here is unusual because the same person is also the controlling shareholder.

There are 3 reasons the key-man problem is sharper at SPCX than at a typical company:

  1. No counterweight exists: Because Musk controls 82% to 85% of votes, the board cannot replace him or impose a succession plan against his wishes.
  2. His attention is divided: As of 2026, Musk simultaneously runs the merged SpaceX and xAI entity, the X platform, Tesla, and Neuralink, so the company you buy receives only a slice of his time.
  3. The valuation prices in his presence: Similarly to how Tesla shares have historically swung on Musk's personal news, much of the $1.77 trillion valuation rests on investor faith in him specifically rather than in the underlying cash flows, which as of 2025 are negative.

Community discussion treats this risk as central rather than theoretical. r/stocks is a Reddit forum where retail investors debate individual companies, with several million members.

Discussions within r/stocks in June 2026 report investors naming Musk key-man risk as a primary reason for sitting out the IPO entirely, alongside the voting structure that prevents shareholders from doing anything about it.

Admittedly, the same dependence cuts both ways, because Musk's track record is the main reason the bulls showed up at all. Either way, that debate only matters to you if you can actually get money into the stock. So can you, legally, from Bangladesh? The honest answer has more layers than most articles will tell you.

Can Bangladeshis Legally Buy SPCX Shares?

Yes, you can buy SPCX as a Bangladeshi because it is a publicly listed Nasdaq stock open to any nationality, but the real constraint is not American law, it is Bangladesh's own foreign exchange rules, which do not permit residents to freely send taka abroad for portfolio investment. The stock itself is open. The money is the hard part.

The legal framework rests on 2 core instruments:

  1. The Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 (FERA): This is the law that empowers Bangladesh Bank, the country's central bank, as the regulator of all foreign currency movement in and out of Bangladesh.
  2. The Guidelines for Foreign Exchange Transactions (GFET) 2018: This is the two volume operating manual that authorised dealer banks follow when approving or rejecting outward transfers.

According to a 2025 lawfirm.com.bd guide on US stock access from Bangladesh, individuals cannot transfer funds abroad for foreign stock market purchases without prior Bangladesh Bank approval, and as of 2025 there are no BSEC licensed intermediaries offering legal retail access to US markets.

Similarly, according to a 2025 Traders Union guide on buying US stocks in Bangladesh, many residents work around this by using international brokers that accept deposits through cards or e-wallets. However, funding those accounts from Bangladesh without approval may itself contravene exchange control rules, so the workaround is not a loophole, it is a violation with extra steps.

Fortunately, one group has meaningfully more flexibility: people earning in foreign currency. Freelancers, remote workers, and exporters who keep documented USD earnings in a foreign currency account in Bangladesh stand on much firmer legal ground, because the money never needs converting from taka in the first place.

Community experience confirms this is the path serious people actually use. Bangladeshi freelancing communities are online groups, largely on Reddit and Facebook, where workers earning from platforms like Upwork and Fiverr share payment and banking advice.

Discussions within Bangladeshi freelancing communities as early as 2024 report members repeatedly asking how to route platform earnings into US brokerage accounts, with experienced members consistently pointing to foreign currency accounts and documented income as the only defensible route.

That covers residents. Meanwhile, millions of Bangladeshis live abroad, and their situation is completely different.

Can Non-Resident Bangladeshis Buy SPCX?

Yes, non-resident Bangladeshis can buy SPCX freely through any broker in their country of residence, because Bangladesh's exchange controls apply to money leaving Bangladesh, not to income you earn and hold abroad. A non-resident Bangladeshi, commonly shortened to NRB, is a Bangladeshi citizen living and working outside the country.

The contrast with residents is stark. For example, a Bangladeshi nurse in London or an engineer in Dubai can open a brokerage account locally, fund it from a local salary, and buy SPCX within minutes, exactly like any other resident of that country. Conversely, their relatives in Bangladesh holding taka have no compliant route at all right now.

Community discussion captures this divide clearly. Bangladeshi expat communities are online forums where NRBs discuss remittances, banking, and money management across borders.

Discussions within Bangladeshi expat and remittance communities through 2025 report a recurring pattern in which NRBs buy US stocks freely from abroad while members at home ask why they cannot do the same, with the answer always coming back to where the earnings sit rather than citizenship.

One caution applies specifically to remittances. Money already sent home to family in Bangladesh cannot legally be redirected back out into US stocks. Therefore, if you are an NRB who wants exposure to SPCX, you should buy before you remit, not after.

Suppose you are a resident who fits through the legal door, or an NRB with funds abroad. Subsequently, what does the actual buying process look like, and what taxes wait on the other side?

How Would a Bangladeshi Actually Buy and Hold SPCX?

To buy SPCX as a Bangladeshi with legally held foreign currency, you open an account with an international broker, fund it from a compliant foreign currency source, submit a W-8BEN tax form, and place an order for the SPCX ticker on the Nasdaq.

To follow that process, you should complete these 5 steps:

  1. Confirm your funding source is compliant: Documented foreign earnings in a resident foreign currency account, or funds held abroad as a non-resident, are the defensible options. Otherwise, converting taka and moving it out informally is where you cross the legal line.
  2. Open an account with an international broker: Interactive Brokers, a US brokerage operating in over 160 markets, is the most commonly cited platform that accepts Bangladeshi applicants, because it runs standard remote verification using your passport or national ID, proof of address, and bank details. In fact, discussions within Bangladeshi freelancing communities in 2025 repeatedly recommend it for exactly this reason, since most competing platforms reject Bangladeshi addresses at signup.
  3. Submit a W-8BEN form: The W-8BEN is a US tax form that certifies you as a foreign investor. The US applies a 30% withholding tax on dividends paid to foreigners, and filing this form through your broker reduces that to 15% under the US Bangladesh tax treaty.
  4. Search the exact ticker, SPCX: This step deserves its own warning, which is coming shortly.
  5. Account for Bangladeshi tax: Capital gains rules in Bangladesh vary by taxpayer category, so you should declare foreign assets honestly and consult a qualified tax adviser before filing.

Here is where different readers face different realities. A freelance developer in Dhaka earning $2,000 a month on Upwork and keeping it in a foreign currency account has a workable, documented route.

Alternatively, a university student in Sylhet holding only taka has no compliant route at all right now, and any platform promising otherwise deserves deep suspicion.

A garment exporter in Narayanganj with retained export earnings sits closer to the freelancer's position, though corporate structures abroad are the more common vehicle at that scale.

Finally, a family in Bogura receiving remittances cannot legally redirect that money into US stocks, but the relative abroad who sends it can buy SPCX directly, as the NRB section explained.

Admittedly, that process assumes you are comfortable with international broker paperwork, minimum transfers, and managing an account built for American users. Fortunately, a simpler route exists, built specifically for people from emerging markets.

Can You Buy US Stocks Like SPCX Through the nsave App?

Yes, you can buy US stocks like SPCX through the nsave app, because the investment feature gives you access to over 500 US stocks, ETFs, bonds, and gold indices starting from just $1, and you should check the in-app stock list to confirm when SPCX appears following the 12 June 2026 debut.

nsave is a fintech app that helps freelancers and professionals from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Egypt, and other emerging markets receive and manage USD abroad. Newly listed Nasdaq stocks typically roll out to app based platforms shortly after their debut rather than on day one, so checking the list directly is the reliable way to confirm availability.

The fit with everything covered previously is direct. The biggest barrier this article has described is not the share price, it is holding your money in USD through a documented, compliant channel.

Because an nsave account holds your foreign earnings abroad, it sits naturally within the same documented foreign income route that freelancers and remote workers already use, and the investing feature then works from that same balance. In other words, the account solves the funding problem and the stock access problem in one place.

There are 4 features that matter most for you as a Bangladeshi reader:

  1. A $1 starting point: You can begin with as little as $1 rather than the roughly 16,600 taka equivalent of a full SPCX share, because fractional access removes the price barrier entirely. That makes it a sensible fit for a freelancer testing the waters with a small slice of one month's earnings.
  2. Over 500 instruments: As of June 2026, the nsave app lists more than 500 US stocks, ETFs, bonds, and gold indices, including household names such as Nvidia, Alphabet, Microsoft, Mastercard, Coca-Cola, and broad market ETFs like SPY, alongside gold products such as the iShares Gold Trust.
  3. No US citizenship required: You can use the investment feature without US citizenship, because the app handles the international transfers and complies with the relevant regulations on your behalf.
  4. Everything in one app: Your USD balance, your transfers, and your investments sit together, which keeps the paper trail clean for the tax declaration duties covered earlier.

If you want the step by step walkthrough, we have published guides on how to invest in US stocks with nsave and how to invest in gold indices with nsave, plus a wider learning library explaining what stocks, ETFs, and gold indices are from first principles.

Investments involve risks, including the potential loss of capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Data provided is for illustrative purposes only. Consult a licensed financial adviser before making any investment decisions. Investment accounts are provided by a third-party broker dealer.

Whichever route you use, one warning applies before you place any order at all. It is not theoretical, because people have already lost money on it this week.

What Is the SPCE Ticker Trap?

SPCE is the ticker for Virgin Galactic, a completely different and much smaller space tourism company, and buying it by mistake instead of SPCX has already burned confused investors. Virgin Galactic flies paying passengers to the edge of space and has no connection to SpaceX. Nevertheless, the two tickers differ by a single letter.

In the 48 hours before the SpaceX debut, Virgin Galactic's stock pumped violently as buyers piled into the wrong symbol. As a result, every confused buyer handed money to a faster trader on the other side.

Community threads documented the chaos in real time. Discussions within r/stocks in June 2026 report traders openly joking about the confusion, with one user describing repeated trading of SPCE swings through the mix-up as the most predictable trade available that week. The joke has a victim on the other side of every trade.

Therefore, you should triple check the ticker before you press buy. SPCX is SpaceX. SPCE is not. Assuming you buy the right ticker, one more set of rules applies specifically to IPO participants, and ignoring them carries consequences.

What Are the IPO Sell-Wait Rules and the Lockup?

Retail investors who received IPO allocations face broker imposed holding expectations of 15 to 60 days, while company insiders are locked up for 12 to 18 months and cannot sell at all during that window.

According to Investopedia, a lock-up period is a window of time after a company goes public during which insiders are restricted from selling their shares. These two restrictions, the broker rules and the insider lockup, will shape how the share price behaves in its first year.

The broker rules break down into 3 tiers. Fidelity, one of the largest US brokerages, expects allocation holders to wait 15 days before selling. Schwab and most other brokers expect 30 days. Meanwhile, Interactive Brokers penalises early sellers with a 60 day denial of future IPO access, and Robinhood applies a 30 day standard. You can legally sell earlier. However, your broker can then bar you from future IPO allocations.

Community threads show how allocation holders are weighing that trade-off. r/SpaceInvestorsDaily is a Reddit forum dedicated specifically to space industry stocks.

Discussions within retail space investing communities in June 2026 report some allocation holders planning to sell immediately and accept the penalty, because they calculate a first day spike is worth a 60 day ban.

The insider lockup matters even more. As of the debut, only around 5% to 7% of total SpaceX shares are actually floating in the market, compared with a typical IPO float of 50% to 75%. Consequently, scarce supply against four times oversubscribed demand props the price up mechanically.

Sceptical investors have described the structure in blunt terms. Discussions within r/stocks threads in June 2026 report sceptics describing the setup as a legal pump scheme, where retail buys first, index funds buy next because Nasdaq inclusion forces them to, and insiders holding over 90% of shares become free to sell 12 to 18 months later.

Allocation itself was rationed too. Fidelity slashed its account minimum from $100,000 to $2,000 specifically for this IPO, and the firm stated it would use a "lottery" to distribute shares as fairly as possible across interested clients. In other words, the price you can buy at today is set by engineered scarcity, not by settled agreement on what the business is worth.

Scarcity affects the share price. Subsequently, a different question affects your income from holding it: does this stock actually pay you anything while you wait?

Will SPCX Pay Dividends?

No, SPCX pays no dividend as of June 2026, and the company has given no indication it plans to start, according to the official S-1 registration statement filed with the SEC. A dividend is a distribution of a company's earnings to its shareholders, typically paid in cash on a per share basis.

SpaceX cannot sensibly distribute earnings because, as covered previously, it has no earnings to distribute. The company lost $2.6 billion in 2025 and is spending roughly $30 billion a year building data centres and satellites.

Accordingly, holding SPCX means your entire outcome depends on the share price going up. There is no income cushion while you wait, unlike dividend paying stocks such as Coca-Cola or the telecom operators Starlink gets compared to.

For you as a Bangladeshi, this has one practical consequence and one piece of good news. The practical consequence is that the W-8BEN form matters less for SPCX itself than for the rest of your portfolio, because there is no dividend for the US to withhold tax from. The good news is that you lose nothing to dividend withholding either. However, you should still file the W-8BEN at account opening, because you will likely hold dividend paying stocks eventually, and the form takes minutes.

A no-dividend trillion dollar stock raises a fair question for anyone used to local markets. How does any of this compare to simply buying shares at home?

How Does SPCX Compare to Investing on the Dhaka Stock Exchange?

SPCX alone is worth roughly 37 times the entire Dhaka Stock Exchange, but the DSE remains far easier and cheaper for you to access as a Bangladeshi resident. The Dhaka Stock Exchange, founded in 1954 and the larger of Bangladesh's two stock exchanges, lists almost 600 securities with a total market capitalisation of approximately $47 billion.

By comparison, SPCX listed at $1.77 trillion, so one American company outweighs every listed company in Bangladesh combined, nearly 40 times over.

There are 3 practical differences you should weigh:

  1. Access: Opening a BO account with a local broker takes days and requires no foreign currency, whereas US market access requires the legal funding routes covered earlier. For a taka-only saver, the DSE is the only compliant equity market available right now.
  2. Tax treatment: Capital gains on the sale of listed shares are exempt for most resident individual taxpayers in Bangladesh, while US stock gains bring both US paperwork and Bangladeshi declaration duties.
  3. Risk concentration: The DSE's largest companies, led by Grameenphone, Walton, and Square Pharmaceuticals, are profitable domestic businesses, whereas SPCX is a loss making company priced for a future it has not yet delivered. Admittedly, the DSE carries its own history of booms and crashes, including the 2010 collapse that bankrupted many retail investors.

The point of the comparison is not that one market beats the other. Rather, the point is that SPCX should be weighed against what you can already do legally and cheaply at home, not treated as the only game available.

Ultimately, all of this builds to the question every reader actually came here to ask.

Should a Bangladeshi Buy SPCX on Day One?

No one can responsibly answer that question for you, because credible, well informed investors are taking completely opposite positions on this exact stock right now. What this article can do, therefore, is lay both positions out honestly.

The bullish case rests on 3 pillars. First, SpaceX dominates space launch with 82% of US launches and owns one of the most rapidly growing internet services on the planet.

Second, the demand picture is real, because according to a 2026 Forbes tracker on the SpaceX IPO, retail orders alone surpassed $100 billion before pricing, and a 2026 CNBC bulletin on the Nasdaq debut confirmed the record $75 billion raise completed without a hitch.

Third, the Tesla precedent looms large in bulls' minds, since $10,000 placed in Tesla's 2010 IPO grew to roughly $3 million, against about $57,000 for the same money in the S&P 500.

Conversely, the bearish case rests on 3 pillars of its own. First, the company loses billions yearly and is priced at 95 times revenue. Second, one person holds up to 85% of the voting power and answers to no one. Third, the tiny float means today's price reflects scarcity rather than value, and the lockup expiry in 2027 could release a wave of insider selling onto the market.

For you as a Bangladeshi reader, one extra factor outweighs both cases: your route in must be legal before any of this matters. A great stock bought through a non-compliant channel is still a foreign exchange violation, and FERA penalties are not a trade worth making.

The Bigger Picture for Bangladeshis

Whatever SPCX does on the chart, this IPO marks something genuinely new. The largest listing in history reserved 30% of its shares for ordinary retail buyers, and brokerages tore down decades old minimums to let them in. Global markets are opening to people they used to ignore, including freelancers and professionals from Bangladesh earning in dollars.

The skills that matter now are the quiet ones: documenting your income properly, holding foreign currency legally, and understanding the rules before acting. Build those habits today, and you will be ready for every opportunity that comes after this one.

For Bangladeshi freelancers and professionals already earning in USD, keeping that money documented and accessible is the foundation everything else stands on. A fintech app like nsave helps people from Bangladesh receive and manage USD abroad, which keeps the paper trail clean for whatever you choose to do next. Investments involve risks, including the potential loss of capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Data provided is for illustrative purposes only. Consult a licensed financial adviser before making any investment decisions. Investment accounts are provided by a third-party broker dealer.

The information provided in this content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. Before making any financial decisions, it is highly recommended that you seek advice from a qualified financial adviser who can consider your individual financial circumstances and objectives.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the official SpaceX stock ticker?

The official SpaceX ticker is SPCX, listed on the Nasdaq as of 12 June 2026. You should not confuse it with SPCE, which belongs to Virgin Galactic, an unrelated space tourism company. Therefore, always type the full ticker and confirm the company name before you place an order.

How much does one SpaceX share cost in Bangladeshi taka?

As of 11 June 2026, one SPCX share at $135 costs roughly 16,600 taka at the interbank rate of about 123 taka per US dollar. However, fractional access through platforms like the nsave app means you can start with as little as $1 rather than buying a full share.

Can I buy SPCX with taka or bKash from Bangladesh?

No, you cannot legally fund a US stock purchase with taka, bKash, or any other local payment method, because Bangladesh Bank's exchange controls under FERA 1947 do not permit converting taka for outward portfolio investment. Accordingly, the only defensible route is money that already sits legally in foreign currency, such as documented freelance earnings in a foreign currency account.

Does SpaceX pay a dividend?

No, SPCX pays no dividend as of June 2026, and none is planned. The company lost $2.6 billion in 2025, so it has no earnings to distribute. Consequently, your entire outcome as a holder depends on the share price rising.

Who controls SpaceX after the IPO?

Elon Musk controls between 82% and 85% of SPCX's voting power through Class B supervoting shares. As a result, ordinary shareholders cannot replace him, influence the board, or submit proposals without first owning at least 3% of the company.

When can SpaceX insiders sell their shares?

Insiders are locked up for 12 to 18 months from the June 2026 listing, which places the earliest large scale insider selling around mid 2027. Notably, only around 5% to 7% of total shares float in the market today, so the lockup expiry could meaningfully increase supply and pressure the price.

Can I start buying US stocks with just $1?

Yes, fractional investing lets you start with $1, because brokers and apps split whole shares into smaller portions. For example, the nsave app offers over 500 US stocks, ETFs, bonds, and gold indices from a $1 starting point, with no US citizenship required. Investments involve risks, including the potential loss of capital, so you should consult a licensed financial adviser before making any investment decisions.

The information in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice from nsave or any of its affiliates. It is not a substitute for advice from a qualified financial adviser. We make no representations or warranties, whether expressed or implied, that the content is accurate, complete, or up to date.

Fees, exchange rates, incentives, and product availability may change and can vary by user and jurisdiction. Examples are illustrative only. Before making any financial decisions, seek advice from a qualified financial adviser who can assess your individual circumstances and objectives.

nsave helps freelancers and professionals from Bangladesh, Nigeria, Pakistan, Egypt, and other emerging markets receive and manage USD abroad. As a non-bank payment provider, your money is not protected by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS). Customer funds are held in regulated, UK and EEA financial institutions, separated from company funds, and protected through safeguarding rules designed for electronic money services.

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