Starting from a warehouse, Elon Musk, who claims a success rate of less than 10%, has once again beaten Wall Street into submission. When Tesla went public, Jim Cramer shouted on TV, "This broken thing shouldn't even be rented," yet retail investors stubbornly drove the first-day stock price up by 41%. By 2026, when SpaceX went public, with a $1.77 trillion valuation and $250 billion in oversubscriptions, retail investors alone took 30% of the quota—classic "Musk premium." He says "shorting is a scam," mocks short sellers as "bastards wanting to see us die," but in practice, he turned the IPO into the most lively capital show in history. He publicly despises Wall Street, yet in reality, he has thoroughly learned its game rules. #我的Gate交易时刻

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