$85 Billion IPO Debacle: South Korean Retail and Institutional Investors Left Empty-Handed as Goldman Sachs Slashes SpaceX Allocations to Zero

Desk

korocamia@naver.com | 2026-06-13 15:21:33


SEOUL — South Korean investors who eagerly anticipated a piece of Elon Musk’s aerospace behemoth, SpaceX, have been left deeply disappointed following an unprecedented allocation wipeout. Mirae Asset Securities, which spearheaded the blockbuster public subscription campaign in South Korea, saw its entire allocated portion completely revoked at the absolute discretion of the lead global underwriter, Goldman Sachs. This institutional maneuver triggered a chaotic market event, forcing the South Korean brokerage to issue full refunds on billions of dollars of subscription deposits that had been snatched up by frantic domestic investors in less than two minutes.

According to South Korean investment banking and financial regulatory sources on June 13, Mirae Asset Securities had initially joined the historic SpaceX Initial Public Offering (IPO) syndicate as an active member of the underwriting group. The firm was slated to secure 2,314,815 shares of Class A common stock out of the massive total offering of 555,555,555 shares. However, during the final post-pricing allocation phase, lead underwriter Goldman Sachs exercised its sweeping discretionary powers to slash the allotment of Mirae Asset and several other international syndicate members to zero, transferring those shares to massive global institutional asset managers instead.

The abrupt and aggressive reshuffling of shares highlights the extreme, unprecedented demand that hit the market immediately following the pricing of the IPO. Global sovereign wealth funds, ultra-high-net-worth family offices, and top-tier institutional funds fiercely competed for a slice of the aerospace pioneer. Faced with a tidal wave of buy orders from these heavyweight entities, Goldman Sachs opted to consolidate the available equity pool, effectively freezing out smaller regional brokerages and their retail clients.

The Legal Fine Print and Discretionary Traps

While South Korean investors expressed profound shock and anger over the cancellation, legal experts point out that the decision falls strictly within standard international underwriting practices. According to official filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the specific share numbers listed next to syndicate members represent an "Underwriting Commitment"—a regulatory statement of theoretical underwriting liability rather than a legally binding, guaranteed distribution allocation. The ultimate "Allocation" of shares to be distributed to underlying retail or local institutional networks remains entirely subject to the unilateral discretion and commercial priorities of the lead bookrunner.

The sudden reversal stands in stark contrast to the immense enthusiasm generated across South Korea’s financial hubs earlier this month. Up until June 10, Mirae Asset Securities had aggressively orchestrated a two-tranche subscription drive tailored specifically for domestic retail players, high-net-worth individuals, qualified professional corporations, and institutional investors. The target capital raise in Seoul alone was set at an ambitious $500 million (approximately 680 billion KRW). Reflecting the unyielding local appetite for Elon Musk-led ventures, the subscription window was an overwhelming success, selling out entirely within one to two minutes of opening.

Massive Refunds and Market Frustration

As a direct consequence of the zero-allocation verdict, Mirae Asset Securities was forced to execute an emergency operational pivot in the early hours of June 13, initiating a massive, blanket refund of 100% of the cash deposits held in client subscription accounts. The sudden operational strain and public relations fallout have left the firm in a defensive posture. "The final actual allocation distributed to each underwriter is determined solely through the overarching discretion of the global lead bookrunner," a senior spokesperson for Mirae Asset Securities stated on condition of anonymity. "Regrettably, during this final calibration, our anticipated volume was entirely dissolved, resulting in significant disruption and immense inconvenience to our valued clients."

While a profound sense of disillusionment and frustration settled over South Korea’s trading desks, SpaceX itself went on to orchestrate an astonishing, record-breaking debut on the Nasdaq. The aerospace pioneer successfully completed the largest equity raise in the history of global capital markets, accumulating a staggering $75 billion (approximately 114 trillion KRW) in fresh capital. The debut performance on the secondary market fully vindicated the aggressive institutional bidding wars. Driven by ferocious, insatiable buying pressure from the opening bell, SpaceX stock finished its first day of trading at $161.11 per share, representing a spectacular 19.34% surge above its initial public offering price, firmly cementing its status as a foundational pillar of the modern global tech economy.

WEEKLY HOT