Virgin Galactic stock has been one of the most talked-about tickers in recent weeks, and it’s not hard to see why.
SPCE hit $8.85 this week, its highest level since June 2024, after surging over 300% from its 2025 low. That’s a move that turns heads on any trading desk.
Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc., SPCE
The rally kicked into higher gear on Monday when a regulatory filing revealed that RichRich Capital LLC had quietly built a 5.26% stake in the company. That disclosure alone pushed the stock up roughly 22% in a single session.
Year-to-date, SPCE is now up more than 130%. The market cap has climbed to nearly $700 million.
Much of the broader sector excitement traces back to one thing: the anticipated SpaceX IPO.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is expected to be the largest IPO in history, with a valuation potentially exceeding $1.78 trillion. Traders on Polymarket are betting that figure could eventually top $2 trillion post-listing.
That enthusiasm has lifted nearly every space-adjacent stock. Rocket Lab, Planet Labs, and Intuitive Machines have all caught a bid. SPCE has been along for the ride — and then some.
One investor, writing under the pseudonym Tangerine Tan Capital, believes some buyers may even be picking up SPCE as a mistaken proxy for SpaceX, given that SPCE’s ticker closely resembles the expected SPCX ticker for the SpaceX IPO. Social media hype and short-squeeze dynamics have also played a role, he argues.
Virgin Galactic also announced it is raising ticket prices for spaceflights to $750,000 per person, up $100,000 from before. The company plans to launch commercial flights later this year.
Not everyone is buying the story.
Tangerine Tan Capital rates SPCE a Sell, calling the rally “speculation rather than a strengthening underlying business.” He points to the company’s debt load and ongoing cash burn as the core issues.
Virgin Galactic posted a net loss of $65 million in its most recent quarter, an improvement from $84 million a year earlier. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $55 million, down from $72 million.
The improvement came mostly from lower expenses, not revenue growth.
Tan also compares SPCE unfavorably to peers like Rocket Lab and Blue Origin, arguing those companies have stronger balance sheets and more financial flexibility.
He does credit the company for its accumulated technical know-how, calling it “a strong barrier to entry” — but says that alone doesn’t make it a buy.
Wall Street broadly agrees with the caution. The average analyst price target sits at $3.61, based on 6 recent analyst reviews: 2 Buys, 3 Holds, and 1 Sell. At current prices, that target implies around 52% downside.
The stock’s RSI has moved into overbought territory, with technical analysts flagging the risk of a pullback after such a sharp run.
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