Investors had a lot to process today. Five major stories moved markets and raised fresh questions about AI spending, inflation, and the future of public markets.
The SpaceX IPO is dominating conversation on Wall Street. The company is expected to list at a valuation of around $1.75 trillion, which would make it the largest public offering in history.

Demand has been strong. Some retail investors have reportedly sold existing positions just to free up cash for the listing.
But not everyone is optimistic. Some analysts are flagging concerns about insider selling and whether the valuation already prices in years of future growth.
History shows that highly anticipated tech IPOs often struggle after their opening day. The SpaceX listing is shaping up to be one of the defining market events of 2026, but the post-IPO performance is still an open question.
Oracle reported strong business growth and landed major AI contracts. Despite that, the stock fell sharply.
The reason was the company’s spending plans. Oracle intends to invest tens of billions of dollars in AI infrastructure. It also plans to raise large amounts of debt and equity to fund those ambitions.
Investors reacted negatively. Markets are still enthusiastic about AI, but there is growing pressure on companies to show that big spending will eventually lead to real profits.
Oracle’s drop is a sign that Wall Street is starting to look more closely at the return on AI investment, not just the headline contracts.
U.S. headline inflation moved back above 4%, a number that caught markets off guard.
Higher energy prices were the main driver. The data raises the possibility that interest rates could stay elevated longer than investors had hoped.
That matters for stocks, especially in the tech and growth sectors, which tend to be sensitive to rate expectations. Inflation reports are now one of the key factors shaping market direction week to week.
Ongoing tensions involving Iran pushed oil prices higher today. Rising energy costs add to inflation pressures and create wider concerns about economic growth.
Energy stocks got a lift from the move. But sectors that depend heavily on fuel, such as transportation and manufacturing, face headwinds if prices stay high.
If oil remains elevated, it could factor into Federal Reserve decisions on interest rates.
Reports emerged today that OpenAI has confidentially filed for an IPO. Anthropic could follow a similar path.
Together, these listings could give investors direct exposure to AI companies for the first time, rather than going through indirect plays like Nvidia, Microsoft, or Alphabet.
Some analysts think this could trigger a rotation in the tech sector, with capital moving from existing AI names into the newly listed companies.
OpenAI’s IPO would rank among the largest technology listings ever if it moves forward.
The post Today’s Top Stories: The Biggest IPO Ever, an Oracle Crash, and OpenAI Going Public appeared first on CoinCentral.


