Axios Markets

June 23, 2026
🌮 Tuesday! Yesterday's U.S. tech slump seems set to deepen today, after another steep selloff in South Korea's chip-driven market. (The Kospi dropped 10%.) AI trade stalwarts like the memory and data storage stocks, semis and fiber optics shares are down sharply pre-market.
- SpaceX is also lower and in danger of falling below $150, where the shares first opened on the public markets.
Today, Matt explains why SpaceX, a company that's swimming in cash, needs to go out and borrow more. Plus, a chart showing who benefits when the stock market goes up.
That's all in 1,066 words, a 4-minute read. Let's do this!
1 big thing: SpaceX's dash for cash
SpaceX still needs money?
Driving the news: After just recently securing $86 billion in a record IPO, Elon Musk's SpaceX plans to raise at least $20 billion more by selling bonds.
Why it matters: SpaceX's public offering earlier this month spotlighted the importance of the stock market to the AI boom. But giant tech companies are also leaning heavily on the corporate bond market to source cash for AI investment.
- Last week, JPMorgan corporate bond analysts noted that data center-related debt was "the single largest driver of near-record debt issuance to start the year."
- "We are not yet at the midpoint of the year and the hyperscalers, data centers and semiconductor financings total $165 billion or already $27 billion more than what was done in the full-year 2025," they wrote.
Between the lines: The proceeds from the bond offering will mostly be used to refinance a $20 billion bridge loan SpaceX took in March as it prepared to go public. Such loans basically ensure that companies planning to go public have the money they would need to wait out an unfavorable turn in market conditions.
- While it's not unusual for companies to refinance their bridge loans in the bond market after going public, the size of SpaceX's deal is a reminder of the scale of the current AI infrastructure boom.
Zoom out: Still, it is hard to imagine that SpaceX needs more money.
- SpaceX told prospective buyers of the bonds that it had some $100.8 billion in cash and cash-equivalent securities in the bank on June 19.
- That's more than Microsoft — Microsoft! — had in the bank at the end of its last year.
Yes, but: The AI boom is creating a lot of numbers that are hard to get one's head around.
- The creation of the world's first trillionaire is one.
- SpaceX's cash burn is another.
Stunning stat: After taking account of capex investments, SpaceX spent $14.12 billion more than it brought in last year.
- That's more than double the company's negative free cash flow of $5.39 billion for the previous year.
- This year, SpaceX could generate negative free cash flow of $28 billion, analysts at KeyBanc Capital Markets estimate.
What they're saying: Investors should probably get used to red ink.
- "Investments, especially in the AI business, should result in billions of dollars in free cash flow deficits for the next few years," wrote analysts for S&P Global Ratings, which along with Moody's and Fitch gave investment-grade ratings to SpaceX.
- "The rating is constrained by elevated execution and financial risks associated with the company's large-scale AI infrastructure buildout, which is characterized by high capital intensity, sustained negative free cash flow, and a wide range of potential monetization outcomes," Moody's said.
The latest: Investors have been tempering their enthusiasm for SpaceX shares, which tumbled over 16% yesterday, vaporizing roughly $400 billion in SpaceX's market capitalization.
- The slump came even as SpaceX announced a deal to provide computing power to an AI startup called Reflection that could generate $6.3 billion in sales.
- The stock has now declined more than 20% in the last three trading sessions.


Friction point: Nobody knows how these big AI investments will turn out.
- And while they wait to find out, investors could see holdings diluted and made riskier by additional borrowing, bond sales, share sales and lockup expiration.
The bottom line: With AI profitability still a distant goal, shareholders are increasingly reliant on rising stock prices to justify these investments.
- For the capital to keep flowing to the AI buildout, those prices really need to keep going up.
2. Charted: Rich getting richer


A booming stock market is definitely making the rich richer, but it won't do much to lift prospects for most everyday Americans or the broader economy, concludes RSM's chief economist Joe Brusuelas in an intriguing new post.
The big picture: Rising stock prices help a very small slice of folks at the top, and the rich don't spend much of those gains — which would at least drive overall economic growth.
By the numbers: The top 20% of income earners in the U.S. hold about 87% of stocks and mutual funds — that amounts to $55 trillion as of June, up from $45 trillion a year ago, per RSM's analysis of data from the Federal Reserve's Distributional Financial Accounts overview.
- The bottom 80% holds about $8 trillion and has seen less of a gain in dollars — up from $7 trillion last year.
How it works: Rising stock prices make people feel richer, and that so-called "wealth effect" does lead to more spending — but not as much spending as you might think, Brusuelas writes.
- That's because most of the gains go to the highest earners, and they don't increase their spending enough to make a big impact on the economy.
- In a paper identifying this phenomenon last year, researchers at the Federal Reserve said that it helps explain the weak recovery in spending following the financial crisis.
Between the lines: Even as the booming stock market leaves most folks behind, lawmakers use it as an economic indicator.
- The market has often served as President Trump's barometer for the economy. He recently explained that his push to resolve the Iran conflict was driven by what he saw happening to stocks.
- "All I know is ​every time we talked about the possibility of peace, the stock market shot up like a rocket ​ship," Trump said last week.
The bottom line: Take this as your latest reminder that the stock market is not the economy.
Thanks for reading! Send tips and story ideas or just check in: [email protected] and [email protected] or reply to this email.
Thanks to Jeffrey Cane for editing and Carlin Becker for copy editing this edition.
Tell your friends to sign up here. You can also hit Emily up on X.com or Bluesky at EmilyRPeck.
Sign up for Axios Markets



