SpaceX completes two orbital launches within 19 hours, IPO receives oversubscription and will list on NASDAQ on June 12

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BlockBeats News, June 6 — SpaceX has recently reset its high-frequency launch record again. From June 3 to 4 local time, the company launched two Falcon 9 rockets from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California and Cape Canaveral in Florida, conducting the Starlink 17-47 and Starlink 10-43 missions, deploying 53 Starlink satellites in total, with less than 19 hours between the two launches.

Of these, the June 3 mission carried 24 satellites and lifted off at 8:40 a.m. Pacific Time; the June 4 mission carried 29 satellites and launched at 6:26 a.m. Eastern Time. Market participants noted that, against the backdrop of most space companies still finding it difficult to achieve stable launches once a month, SpaceX has made back-to-back orbital launches the norm.

Meanwhile, SpaceX is set to list on the Nasdaq on June 12 under the stock ticker “SPCX.” The company’s offering price has been set at $135 per share, and it plans to raise $750 billion. SpaceX’s IPO attracted investor subscription of $1500 billion, with the subscription amount reaching twice the planned fundraising amount, setting a global IPO record.

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