South Korea clears $1.5 billion in dollar demand linked to SpaceX IPO
Korean brokerages scrambled for dollars ahead of what could be the largest public listing in financial history, briefly rattling the won.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 10, 2026South Korea has worked through roughly $1.5 billion in dollar purchase demand tied to SpaceX’s upcoming initial public offering, removing a key source of pressure on the Korean won just days before the listing is expected to go live.
The demand, which ranged between $1.2 billion and $1.5 billion according to reports, stemmed from local brokerages front-loading dollar purchases on behalf of clients eager to buy into SpaceX shares.
What happened and why it matters
The $1.5 billion figure, confirmed as of June 10, 2026, represents the bulk of that demand now having been absorbed by the market. With the clearance essentially complete, no further significant impact on FX markets is expected from IPO-related flows.
AdvertisementSpaceX’s listing is planned for the NASDAQ under the ticker SPCX, with the expected debut window falling around June 12 to 13, 2026. The company’s valuation is estimated at approximately $1.75 trillion, which would make it the largest IPO in history by a comfortable margin. For context, Saudi Aramco’s 2019 listing raised about $25.6 billion and was considered a generational event.
The offering is reportedly 2x oversubscribed, meaning demand from investors is roughly double the available shares.
Why Korean investors are all in
Korean brokerages clearly anticipated elevated client interest. The $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion in dollar demand built up as firms prepared for what they expected to be elevated client interest, pre-positioning dollars to ensure they could execute trades when the listing goes live.
It’s worth noting that this entire episode played out in traditional financial channels. There has been no observable involvement of digital assets or tokens in either the FX market dynamics or the IPO preparations themselves.
What this means for investors
The immediate implication is straightforward: a source of short-term volatility in the won has been neutralized. South Korea’s financial authorities appear to have handled the situation without dramatic intervention, suggesting the system absorbed the shock reasonably well.
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