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Buzzy tech IPOs are overwhelming retail trading platforms
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Buzzy tech IPOs are overwhelming retail trading platforms

Fast Company · Jun 15, 2026, 3:33 PM · Also reported by 1 other source

Space X’s initial public offering lived up to expectations, making Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire and minting more than 4,000 millionaires in an instant as the stock price blew past its asking price and kept rising—up 27% in the first few hours of trading. While the firm sought $75 billion from the public market, there was reportedly more than $250 billion in demand. Jay Ritter, director of the IPO Initiative at the University of Florida’s Warrington College of Business, tells Fast Company he heard from one colleague who requested 100 SpaceX shares through Robinhood and received just one. Another colleague requested 1,000 shares and also received only one. Part of the problem is that retail investment platforms are hugely popular with the public but represent only a tiny proportion of the overall market. Ritter says platforms like Robinhood and Fidelity are now a fixture in the IPO process, but retail investors still appear to be getting only a sliver of the shares they want. He heard, for instance, that Fidelity gave one customer just 10 shares after they requested 300. Even with Bloomberg reporting $100 billion in retail demand for SpaceX shares, Ritter says “mom-and-pop retail investors are only getting a tiny fraction of what they asked for.” Retail investors are being squeezed from both sides: Stock allocators prefer and prioritize institutional investors over Johnny-come-lately, gamified apps. At the same time, unprecedented interest in public-friendly stocks is pushing retail investment apps’ infrastructure to the breaking point—and beyond. Robinhood, the retail trading platform founded in 2013, which boasts 27.7 million customers trading 231 million options contracts in a normal month, said in a post on X that “some customers experienced latency and intermittent issues” because of record-breaking traffic driven by interest in SpaceX. Those customers were not happy. Robinhood saw record-breaking traffic today. As a result, some customers experienced

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