Two of the most talked-about assets of the past year sit at opposite ends of the performance table right now. SpaceX (SPCX) just completed a record-shattering IPO and has been ripping higher ever since, while $Bitcoin — the original "number-go-up" asset — is actually well below where it traded a year ago. So if you had money to put to work, which one would have rewarded you more?
Let's run the numbers on both, using a clear apples-to-apples comparison: a SpaceX investor who bought at the IPO launch versus a Bitcoin investor who bought one year ago, both measured against today's prices.
*Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
Here's where each asset stands today versus its entry point:
On the surface, it's not close: the SpaceX IPO buyer is sitting on a near-50% gain in a matter of weeks, while the year-ago Bitcoin buyer is deep in the red.
Numbers feel more real in dollars. Imagine you put $1,000 into each:
SpaceX at IPO launch ($135):

Bitcoin one year ago (~$106,000):

Same $1,000, wildly different outcomes. The SpaceX position nearly grew by half; the Bitcoin position lost more than a third of its value. The gap between them is over $870 on a $1,000 stake.
SpaceX's debut wasn't just big — it was the largest IPO in history, opening at a ~$1.77 trillion valuation. A few forces drove SPCX higher out of the gate:
Bitcoin's decline isn't a knock on the asset's long-term thesis — it's a reminder of its volatility. The past 12 months saw BTC hit an all-time high near $126,000 in late 2025 before a sharp retracement, dragged lower by tightening macro conditions, ETF outflows, and a months-long geopolitical conflict that crushed risk appetite. At ~$65,200, Bitcoin sits well off both its highs and its year-ago level.
The key nuance: your Bitcoin return depends enormously on when you bought. A buyer from two years ago is still comfortably in profit; the year-ago buyer who caught the top is not. That timing sensitivity is the whole story with a volatile asset.
Before crowning SpaceX, a few critical caveats matter:
If you're scoring purely on the trades described — SpaceX at IPO versus Bitcoin a year ago — SpaceX is the clear winner, turning $1,000 into ~$1,489 while Bitcoin shrank it to ~$615. The IPO buyer caught a once-in-a-generation listing; the Bitcoin buyer caught a cycle top.
But investing isn't about the cleanest backtest — it's about what happens next. SpaceX carries classic post-IPO froth risk at $201, while Bitcoin at $65,200 is closer to historically oversold territory than to euphoria. The better past investment was clearly SPCX. The better future investment depends on your time horizon, your risk tolerance, and whether you believe a hot IPO keeps running or a beaten-down Bitcoin mounts another comeback.
As always: past performance tells you what happened, not what will.