A wave of new funds is rushing to capture the SpaceX IPO moment, but analysts warn the space economy is still a crowded niche masquerading as a broad market.
Space-themed ETFs are pulling in cash at a remarkable pace. In just the last month, these funds have attracted $1.3 billion in new inflows, pushing total assets under management to $3.3 billion - still a niche corner of the market, but one growing fast enough to draw attention from Wall Street.
30-day inflows | Total AUM | Pure-play funds | UFO YTD return |
$1.3B | $3.3B | 7 | +49% |
Key details
Until this year, the Procure Space ETF (UFO), launched in 2019, was the only pure-play option for investors wanting exposure to the space economy rather than the broader aerospace and defense sector. That changed when SpaceX signaled a 2026 IPO.
Six new funds have been launched in the last three months alone. The newest, Tema Space Innovators ETF (NASA), pulled in $1.27 billion in just seven weeks, more than UFO's $972 million across seven years. VanEck (WARP) and Corgi Space and Satellite (DIPR) debuted days apart in early May and have already collected $13.6 million together.
At least two more are expected before SpaceX's anticipated mid-June debut, with leveraged and income-focused SpaceX-specific funds already filed with the SEC.
Market reaction
This isn't just SpaceX hype - sector stocks were moving well before any IPO announcement. Rocket Lab (RKLB) is up 393% over the past 12 months. AST SpaceMobile (ASTS) has gained 258%. UFO itself has returned 133.6% over the last year and 49% year-to-date, a sharp reversal from when Morningstar called it the worst ETF launch of 2019.
Why it matters for traders
The SpaceX IPO could be a major liquidity event for the sector and will likely bring a fresh wave of retail interest. UFO's CEO Andrew Chanin frames the space economy as "a tollbooth on the AI superhighway" - satellites and potentially orbital data centers becoming essential infrastructure for the next communications cycle. That thesis is gaining traction, with two-thirds of UFO's total inflows arriving in just the last 12 months.
What to watch
SpaceX's expected mid-June IPO is the obvious catalyst. Watch for the two additional ETF launches expected before then, plus any leveraged or income products tied directly to SpaceX shares.
The real question is whether this sector can hold its gains once the IPO hype settles, or whether the overlap problem forces a shakeout among funds chasing too few companies.
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