June 06, 2026 ChainGPT

Did Retail Sell Bitcoin to Chase SpaceX IPO? On-Chain Data Mixed; ETF Redemptions Spike

Did Retail Sell Bitcoin to Chase SpaceX IPO? On-Chain Data Mixed; ETF Redemptions Spike
Did retail crypto traders sell bitcoin to chase the SpaceX IPO? The market is buzzing — but the on-chain evidence is mixed. What’s happening Elon Musk’s SpaceX is reportedly offering up to 30% of a potential $75 billion IPO allocation directly to retail investors through Robinhood, Fidelity and Charles Schwab — a far larger retail carve-out than in most IPOs. The roadshow opened Thursday and was already oversubscribed, Bloomberg reported, with the company pitching shares at a roughly $1.8 trillion valuation. SpaceX is expected to price on June 11 and list on the Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX the following day. Crypto market reaction Bitcoin tumbled roughly 16% over the same period, briefly dipping below $60,000 before recovering to about $61,000 (CoinDesk). That sharp move prompted speculation that retail investors were cashing out crypto to fund SpaceX allocations. What the flow data say Stablecoins are the clearest on-chain proxy for crypto-to-dollar conversions: a trader selling bitcoin typically converts to a dollar-pegged token such as USDC or Tether before redeeming for cash. If large numbers of retail investors were selling to buy SpaceX, you’d expect unusual stablecoin outflows from exchanges or a drop in stablecoin supply as issuers burn redeemed tokens. But CoinDesk and CryptoQuant data show no clear anomaly. USDC and Tether outflows have remained within the range seen since February; the largest single-day moves in recent months were $2.5 billion USDC on May 22 and $3.6 billion Tether on May 20 — both before the sell-off. In contrast, Bitcoin and Ether did see big single-day withdrawals from exchanges on Friday: about 66,470 BTC and 2.49 million ETH moved off exchanges, among the year’s largest totals. Withdrawals normally indicate coins moving to private wallets (often for long-term holding), while inflows indicate potential selling pressure. A blind spot: custodial brokerage accounts On-chain metrics have limits. They can’t see activity inside custodial brokerage accounts at platforms like Robinhood or Coinbase, where users can sell crypto for dollars without crypto ever touching public blockchains. That means some broker-funded SpaceX purchases could be invisible to on-chain trackers. More definitive answers will have to wait for brokerage disclosures. Robinhood publishes monthly trading metrics (June crypto volumes due mid‑July), and Coinbase is expected to detail retail activity in its second‑quarter results later in the month. Funds tell a clearer story One area showing unmistakable cash drains: spot crypto funds. Spot bitcoin ETFs experienced 13 straight days of outflows through June 3 — a record streak totaling about $4.4 billion — before a small $3 million inflow ended it. Ether ETFs logged a longer 17‑session withdrawal streak that broke the same day. Redemptions from these funds are “real” selling because issuers must sell underlying coins to meet redemptions. Bottom line There’s credible market chatter that some retail investors could be moving money from crypto into the SpaceX IPO. But on-chain stablecoin metrics don’t show an obvious exodus, and the biggest visible crypto flows this week looked more like withdrawals and dip-buying than a mass scramble for cash. The firmest evidence of selling so far comes from ETF redemptions. The picture should become clearer as broker-dealers and exchanges publish their trading and flows figures in the coming weeks. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news