Chinese investors blocked from SpaceX IPO: How they are finding alternative routes to gain exposure
Chinese investors are seeking indirect ways to gain exposure to SpaceX’s highly anticipated initial public offering (IPO), after being excluded from direct participation in what could become the world’s largest listing.The surge in interest around Elon Musk’s rocket and satellite internet company has triggered strong fear of missing out (FOMO) among mainland investors. With direct access blocked, many are turning to offshore brokerage accounts, Hong Kong-listed proxy stocks and domestic China A-share investments linked to the commercial space sector.SpaceX has barred investors from mainland China and Hong Kong from participating in its IPO, citing regulatory and compliance concerns, South China Morning Post reported.The company has launched its marketing roadshow with shares priced at US$135 each, targeting a valuation of around US$1.8 trillion ahead of its expected Nasdaq debut.Access constraints have frustrated even experienced investors. One mainland investor said: “I can only buy after it lists,” said Wang Xi, a retail investor who has long traded US stocks through an offshore brokerage account.He added that he had hoped to secure IPO shares, but access was restricted to eligible clients in the United Kingdom.The restrictions come amid tighter regulation of offshore trading channels. China has launched a crackdown on unlicensed cross-border securities services, forcing major brokerage platforms to limit new account openings and deposits for mainland users.Despite this, brokerage firms are trying to attract overseas users by offering promotional incentives linked to SpaceX-themed trading products.
Demand spills into China’s domestic market
With limited access to the IPO, investor demand has shifted into China’s domestic A-share market and Hong Kong-listed companies linked to the commercial space industry.By Wednesday, an index tracking China’s commercial space sector had risen for the year, outperforming blue-chip benchmarks but lagging the country’s top technology index.Investors say they hope gains from SpaceX’s listing could spill over into Chinese space-related stocks.“I hope SpaceX’s listing performance, if it rallies sharply, can spill over into A-shares,” said Eric Liu, a mainland retail investor investing in a domestic space-focused fund.His fund, however, has fallen about 10 per cent this year, showing the risks of such thematic bets.
Space-linked Chinese stocks see strong speculative interest
Several Chinese companies with exposure to aerospace and satellite supply chains have seen sharp gains as investors look for indirect SpaceX exposure.State-backed aerospace and satellite firms remain central to the sector, covering electronics, satellite manufacturing and communications infrastructure.Other listed companies producing components such as antennas, connectors and radio-frequency systems have also surged, with some hitting record highs this year.Some firms have been linked in brokerage reports to global satellite networks, although official company disclosures typically refer only to general overseas customers.Similarly, electronics and materials companies with historic links to overseas technology supply chains have attracted speculative buying, despite limited confirmed details of their involvement.
Analysts see broader sector support
Analysts say SpaceX’s IPO could act as a benchmark for global commercial space valuations and may support sentiment across China’s own space industry.They observe that China’s commercial space sector is expanding, supported by more frequent satellite launches, reusable rocket testing and stronger policy backing, alongside a growing pipeline of related listings.However, they caution that investor enthusiasm should remain aligned with fundamentals as speculative trading in thematic stocks continues to rise.