Wall Street Weekly: June 5–12, 2026

Wall Street Weekly: June 5–12, 2026

SpaceX (SPCX) began trading on Nasdaq today at $135/share — the largest equity offering in history at a $75B raise and a $1.765T market cap. The full issue covers 12 new M&A deals above $1B (led by the $23.5B SFR consortium), Alphabet's $85B equity raise close, Anthropic's $35B compute financing, Jeff Bezos's Prometheus Energy at a $41B valuation, and the SEC's proposal to repeal Reg NMS Rules 611 and 610(e). Full coverage: IPOs, M&A, regulatory actions, mega financings, and personnel moves for June 5–12.

Wall Street Brief
2026/6/12 · 14:29
購読 2 件 · コンテンツ 5 件
SpaceX began trading on Nasdaq this morning as SPCX — the culmination of the largest equity offering in U.S. history. Twelve new M&A deals above $1 billion were signed during the week, Alphabet upsized its equity raise to $85 billion, and the SEC moved to dismantle core market-structure rules in place since 2005. Full structural coverage for June 5–12, 2026, follows.

SpaceX (SPCX) — trading debuts today

SpaceX priced its IPO at $135.00 per share on June 11, selling 555,555,555 Class A shares and raising $75 billion — more than double Saudi Aramco's $29.4 billion record from 2019. 1 At 13.08 billion total shares outstanding, the IPO price implies a market capitalization of approximately $1.765 trillion, placing SpaceX as the seventh most-valuable U.S. public company from day one. 2 Underwriters hold a 30-day greenshoe option on an additional 83,333,333 shares; full exercise would lift total proceeds to roughly $85.7 billion. 3
Trading begins at 9:30 AM ET today under ticker SPCX on Nasdaq. As of 6:00 AM ET, the pre-market reference price stands at $135.00 with no trades yet executed. U.S. equity futures were higher ahead of the open, helped by President Trump's announcement Thursday that an Iran peace deal would be signed "in the next few days." 4
SpaceX Dragon capsule in orbit with solar panels deployed
SpaceX Dragon capsule — the company's fleet spans cargo, crew, and satellite delivery operations, with Starlink connectivity the sole profitable segment at IPO. 2

Deal structure and governance

The offering used a fixed price rather than a marketed range — a structure rarely seen at this scale. 1 The 22-bank syndicate is led by Goldman Sachs, with Morgan Stanley, BofA Securities, Citigroup, and J.P. Morgan among the 11 joint book-runners; 11 additional co-managers include Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBC, UBS, and Wells Fargo. 3 Legal counsel: Gibson Dunn (SpaceX), Davis Polk (underwriters).
Elon Musk — SpaceX's founder, CEO, CTO, and chairman — will hold approximately 82.4% of voting power post-IPO through Class B shares (10 votes each vs. 1 vote for Class A). 3 His economic ownership is approximately 42%. SpaceX will qualify as a "controlled company" under Nasdaq rules and will use related governance exemptions. The float at IPO is only ~4.25% of total shares outstanding.
Retail investors received approximately 20–22% of the offering, cut from an earlier expectation of ~30%, after institutional orders overwhelmed the book. 5 BlackRock alone placed an order for at least $5 billion, and retail investors submitted more than $70 billion in aggregate orders. 6 IPO proceeds are earmarked for AI compute infrastructure, launch facilities, and satellite constellation expansion. 1
SpaceX's Q1 2026 financials show $4.7 billion in revenue and a $4.3 billion net loss. 7 Starlink connectivity generated a $1.2 billion operating profit in Q1; rocket launch lost $662 million; the AI segment (xAI, absorbed February 2, 2026) lost nearly $2.5 billion. xAI capital expenditures more than doubled to $12.7 billion in full-year 2025. 7 On a trailing-twelve-month basis, revenue is $19.3 billion, gross margin 48.8%, and net margin -45.0%. SpaceX conducted 85% of all global orbital launches in 2025 by count. 2
Tim Farrar of TMF Associates summed up the structural tension: "The valuation is completely dependent on the degree to which people believe in Elon Musk. It's not dependent on the current business." 7

Index mechanics: Nasdaq 100 fast-track and the triple multiplier

Approximately one month before today's debut, Nasdaq changed its Nasdaq 100 index inclusion rules, reducing the post-IPO waiting period from several months to as few as three weeks and applying a 3× multiplier to SpaceX's available float for weighting purposes — meaning index funds must buy SPCX as if 12% of the company is freely trading, rather than the actual 4.25%. 8 Duke University finance professor Campbell Harvey estimated that roughly half of initial SPCX demand will come from index funds mechanically tracking this inflated weight: "What will that do? That will increase the price. And by the time the retail investor gets into the market, the price will be inflated by this demand." 8 S&P Dow Jones Indices declined to grant SpaceX an exception to its four standard S&P 500 requirements, citing SpaceX's net losses, sub-10% float, and lack of a 12-month listing history. 4
Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) sent letters on June 11 to Nasdaq, S&P Dow Jones, FTSE Russell, and Morningstar Indexes questioning whether the rule changes resulted from lobbying by Musk or SpaceX, warning the changes "have the potential to destabilize markets and create significant risks for American investors, especially retirees." 9 Nasdaq's public position: "The new rules are an improvement on the old system, which could have forced index funds to buy even more stock after big IPOs." 9

Analyst initiations

Oppenheimer's Timothy Horan initiated coverage with a Buy and $190 price target (~40% upside from $135), valuing SpaceX at approximately $2.5 trillion. 10 Horan called SpaceX "the only vertically-integrated AI company" with proprietary data, models, hardware, satellites, and engineering talent combined. His bull case rests on 10,000 annual Starship launches eventually supporting 1 million orbital data centers; his risk caveat: commercial Starship operations likely need to begin before year-end 2026 for estimates to hold. New Street Research (Pierre Ferragu) initiated at Buy and $165. 6 PitchBook's Franco Granda was more cautious, noting post-IPO companies historically underperform the broad market once the scrutiny of public reporting begins.

IPO pipeline — June 5–12

Four traditional IPOs priced during the window and five SPACs raised a combined $850 million. The AI IPO queue extended: Anthropic (confidential S-1 filed June 1) and OpenAI (confidential S-1 filed June 8) are both now in the SEC review pipeline.

Traditional IPOs priced June 5–12

TickerCompanySectorRaiseOffer price vs. rangeFirst-day returnJun 12 vs. IPO
PBLSParabilis MedicinesHealth care$670M$20.00 (above $17–$19)+58.0%+51.6% / $30.31
EROCERockIndustrials$600M$21.50 (midpoint $20–$23)−12.8%−16.7% / $17.92
FRBTForbrightFinancials$142M$18.00 (low end $18–$20)+0.6%+0.6% / $18.10
WHKWhiteHawk MineralsEnergy$200M (upsized)$26.00 (midpoint $25–$27)~flat+4.4% / $27.13
Sources: 11
Parabilis Medicines (PBLS) was the week's standout. The clinical-stage biotech, developing engineered peptide therapies for cancer, priced June 9 above its marketed range and surged 58% on its Nasdaq debut before settling at +51.6%. Lead underwriters: Leerink Partners, BofA Securities, Evercore ISI, and Guggenheim Securities. 12
ERock (EROC), a natural gas power-generation company, broke its $21.50 offer price on its first day and has continued falling to $17.92 as of June 12. Nine underwriters including Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, and Barclays could not prevent the sell-off. 13
WhiteHawk Minerals (WHK) offers approximately 7.7% dividend yield at the IPO price on its Marcellus and Haynesville Shale royalty portfolio spanning ~3.4 million gross DSU acres. The deal was upsized from 6.9 million to 7.7 million shares before pricing. 14
Forbright (FRBT) is a digital-first bank specializing in middle-market commercial lending. It priced June 10 at the low end of its $18–$20 range, raising $142 million. Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan were among the eight bookrunners. The stock has barely moved from its $18.00 offer price, closing at $18.10 as of June 12. 41
From the prior window, Applied Aerospace (AADX) staged the week's sharpest recovery: from −12.3% on June 5 to +10.5% as of June 12, a gain of roughly 26% from its intraweek low. INNIO (INIO), which priced June 3 at $2.43 billion, held its first-day gains and closed at $33.36 (+23.6% from IPO). 11
Deep Fission (FISN), a nuclear/advanced energy company that priced May 28 raising $156 million, has still not begun trading as of June 12 — more than 15 days after pricing, an unusually long gap that Renaissance Capital's IPO Calendar continues to carry as upcoming. Lead underwriters Benchmark and Seaport Global have not issued a statement. 15

AI IPO pipeline: Anthropic and OpenAI file confidentially

Anthropic confidentially submitted a draft S-1 to the SEC on June 1 at a $965 billion private valuation ($47 billion annualized revenue run-rate). 16 OpenAI followed on June 8 at an $852 billion valuation. 16 Neither has filed a public S-1; SEC rules require the public filing to land at least 15 days before any roadshow. CNBC has reported OpenAI is targeting a Q4 2026 IPO. If SPCX's reception today is strong, both companies may accelerate their timelines.

SPACs: 5 deals, $850M, June 5–12

Five blank-check vehicles priced during the window for a combined $850 million. 17 The sports-focused SHOT (RMG ML Sports Holdings, $200 million, Santander sole bookrunner) is led by former Premier League CEO Keith Wyness and former Atlético Madrid deal executive David James Carpenter. JAB Acquisition Corp I ($150 million, D. Boral Capital) is led by former Oppenheimer Funds CFO David Pfeffer. Year-to-date through June 12, 108 SPAC IPOs have raised $18.8 billion. 18

M&A — 12 new deals above $1B

The week produced twelve new billion-dollar-plus transactions across telecom, pharma, autos, food ingredients, energy, real estate, and retail. The headline by size is the SFR consortium at $23.5 billion.
Acquirer(s)TargetEVStructureStatusDate
Bouygues / Orange / Free-IliadSFR (Altice France)$23.5B (€20.35B)MoU; asset splitFinal agreement H2 2026; close H2 2027Jun 6
GSKNuvalent$10.6BAll-cash, $124/shareSigned; tender offer structureJun 9
KKR + Energy Capital PartnersDCC (Ireland)$7.63B (£5.7B)Sweetened bidDCC signals supportJun 10
Dana Inc.Eaton Mobility Group$5.1B (8.3× EBITDA)MergerSignedJun 11
IngredionTate & Lyle$3.6B (£2.7B)All-cash, 595p/shareSignedJun 8
Frasers Group (Mike Ashley)Hugo Boss (remaining ~74%)$2.3B (€2B)OfferHugo Boss reviewingJun 10
Ennoconn (Taiwan)Kontron (Austria)$1.7BOffer, €23.50/shareFiledJun 10
People Inc. (Barry Diller)MGM Resorts (~74%)$41.89B EV / $48.30/shareNon-binding, all-cashProposal submittedJun 1
Sources: 19 20

SFR consortium ($23.5B) — France's big three split the fourth

Bouygues Telecom, Orange SA, and Free-Iliad Group signed a memorandum of understanding on June 6 to acquire SFR — France's second-largest telecom operator — from Patrick Drahi's Altice France for €20.35 billion ($23.5 billion including debt). 19 The deal would divide SFR's assets and customers among the three acquirers, reducing France's mobile market from four to three operators. Final agreement is expected in H2 2026; regulatory close targets H2 2027. EU antitrust review is required and will test the Commission's framework for assessing acquisitions by industry competitors acting collectively.

GSK / Nuvalent ($10.6B) — Project Nashville

GSK announced on June 9 the all-cash acquisition of Nuvalent, a U.S. oncology biotech, at $124 per share — approximately a 40% premium — for a total of $10.6 billion. 19 This is GSK's largest acquisition in its history, structured as a tender offer (internal codename: Project Nashville). Nuvalent's two lead assets are ALK/ROS1-targeted therapies in late-stage trials for advanced lung cancer; GSK expects meaningful earnings contribution beginning 2027. The deal continues GSK's push to rebuild its oncology pipeline against AstraZeneca and Roche.

AvalonBay / Equity Residential — leadership slate named

AvalonBay Communities (NYSE: AVB) and Equity Residential (NYSE: EQR) announced the full executive leadership team for their planned merger on June 8. 21 The combined entity will hold over 180,000 rental apartments with a pro-forma enterprise value of approximately $69 billion.
Benjamin W. Schall (current AvalonBay CEO) will serve as President and CEO; Steve Sterrett as Board Chair. The eight direct reports split roughly 6/2 in favor of AvalonBay: Michael Manelis (EVP & COO, from EQR), Kevin O'Shea (EVP & CFO, from AVB), Matthew Birenbaum (EVP & Chief Development Officer, from AVB), Sean Breslin (EVP & Chief Investment and Growth Officer, from AVB), Scott Fenster (EVP & General Counsel, from EQR), Pamela Thomas (EVP, Portfolio and Asset Management, from AVB), Alaine Walsh (EVP, Human Capital, from AVB), and Ted Schulman (EVP of Legal Affairs, transitional, from AVB). 21 Schall said the team "brings unmatched expertise, complementary strengths, and a collective drive to create one of the country's great real estate companies." 21 The merger's Form S-4 has not yet been filed with the SEC; close remains on track for H2 2026.
AvalonBay apartment community exterior with brand signage
AvalonBay Communities property. The AVB/EQR merger of equals, at $69B enterprise value, would create the largest publicly traded apartment REIT in the U.S. 21

WBD / Paramount Skydance — ACCC clears, EU opens subsidy probe

Australia's ACCC approved the Paramount Skydance / Warner Bros. Discovery transaction on June 10, with a 14-calendar-day waiting period expiring June 23. 20 Simultaneously, the European Commission opened a Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) review into the Gulf sovereign wealth fund's approximately $24 billion backing of the transaction. The EU must decide by July 14 whether to approve or launch a full investigation. 19

Other notable deals

Dana / Eaton Mobility ($5.1B): Dana Incorporated agreed June 11 to merge with Eaton's Mobility Group, valued at 8.3× 2026 pro-forma EBITDA (5.9× including $250 million run-rate synergies). 19 The combined company will generate approximately $10 billion in revenue serving the light-vehicle and commercial-vehicle markets.
Ingredion / Tate & Lyle ($3.6B): Ingredion agreed June 8 to acquire Tate & Lyle at 595 pence per share — roughly a 59% premium — plus a 20-pence special dividend. 22 Tate & Lyle (Splenda, plant-based ingredients) will delist from the London Stock Exchange after 87 years, ending its listing history. Combined business value is approximately $9.9 billion, positioned for GLP-1-era dietary shifts.
People Inc. / MGM Resorts ($41.89B EV): Barry Diller's People Inc. (formerly IAC) submitted a non-binding all-cash offer of $48.30 per share ($18 billion equity / $41.89 billion including debt) to acquire the MGM Resorts stake it doesn't already own. 23 People Inc. already holds approximately 26.1% of MGM. The offer is non-binding with no financing structure disclosed.

Mega financings

AI infrastructure capital needs dominated the week. Alphabet closed its upsized raise, Anthropic locked $35 billion in compute capacity, Amazon drew a new $17.5 billion loan, and Bezos's AI venture reached a $41 billion valuation in a single round.

Alphabet — $85B equity raise closes

Alphabet raised $84.75 billion across three tranches that priced June 4–5: a $10 billion Berkshire Hathaway private placement, a $30 billion underwritten offering (including $15 billion of mandatory convertible preferred), and a $40 billion at-the-market program launching Q3 2026. 24 Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Morgan Stanley are joint bookrunners. Alphabet's stock has fallen for four consecutive weeks despite — or because of — the raise; Google Cloud quarterly revenue is $20 billion (up 63% year-on-year) with a contracted backlog now above $460 billion. 24 CEO Sundar Pichai said demand "significantly exceeds" available supply, while Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon described the transaction as "the first concrete actual data point" for large-scale AI equity sales, adding: "We are definitely in a moment where there's more greed than there is fear." 24

Anthropic — $35B compute capacity, Apollo/Blackstone/Broadcom

Apollo and Blackstone on June 9 publicly announced a $35 billion AI compute capacity financing for Anthropic, using Broadcom-designed custom chips and Broadcom's AI XPV platform. 25 Fluidstack will operate the sites; initial 1 GW deployment is targeted for mid-2026. The overall arrangement is structured to scale to more than 20 GW of compute capacity by 2028 for leading AI labs. Apollo leads the initial investment batch, with Blackstone Credit & Insurance participating.

Amazon — $17.5B delayed-draw term loan

Citigroup led a $17.5 billion delayed-draw term loan for Amazon on June 10, available to draw until late September. 26 The loan, priced at SOFR + 62.5–87.5 basis points, was syndicated to JPMorgan, Bank of America, HSBC, Wells Fargo, and roughly a dozen other banks; each draw carries a three-year repayment. Amazon's total debt now exceeds $225 billion, up 50% year-on-year as of Q1 2026. 26 The company's 2026 capex plan is approximately $200 billion, the highest of any hyperscaler; it has separately committed to invest up to $50 billion in OpenAI and $10–25 billion in Anthropic.

Meta — equity raise FT report, stock drops 5.5%

A June 5 Financial Times report said Meta Platforms was exploring a "tens of billions of dollars" stock issuance to fund AI infrastructure. 27 Meta's spokesperson called it "pure speculation," saying no banks had been hired. 27 Meta stock fell 5.5% to $593 on volume roughly double the recent average; no SEC equity filing has been submitted. Meta's 2026 capex guidance is $125–145 billion.

Prometheus — $12B Series B at $41B valuation

Jeff Bezos's AI venture Prometheus raised $12 billion in a Series B on June 11, valuing the company at $41 billion. 28 Investors include BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, Arch Venture Partners, DST Global, and JPMorgan. Prometheus is building AI tools for engineering and manufacturing — described as pursuing an "artificial general engineer" — with AWS cloud infrastructure provided by Amazon.

NEURA Robotics — $1.4B Series C at $7B valuation

NEURA Robotics (Metzingen, Germany) closed up to $1.4 billion in Series C funding on June 10 at a $7 billion valuation, co-led by Tether and Qualcomm Ventures. 28 Amazon (AWS), NVIDIA, Bosch, Schaeffler, and the European Investment Bank participated. NEURA builds cognitive humanoid and mobile robots with a shared AI system it calls "Neuraverse"; order backlog exceeds $1 billion.

Hut 8 — $4.25B investment-grade data center notes

Hut 8 completed a $4.25 billion investment-grade senior secured note offering on June 10 at a 6.129% coupon, maturing 2042, to fund the Beacon Point data center in Texas. 42 AI-related IG bond issuance now accounts for roughly 14% of all new U.S. corporate bond supply, per Goldman Sachs estimates.
CNBC studio screen showing "THE TRILLION-DOLLAR IPO RACE" headline
CNBC Closing Bell coverage of the AI IPO race, June 2026. Anthropic ($965B) and OpenAI ($852B) both filed confidential S-1s this week; SPCX's reception today may accelerate their roadshow timelines. 16

Regulatory enforcement and rulemaking

Seven agencies were active in the June 5–12 window. The structural headline is the SEC's proposed repeal of core Reg NMS rules that have governed U.S. equity market structure for two decades.

SEC — Reg NMS 611/610(e) repeal proposed

The SEC on June 11 proposed rescinding Regulation NMS Rules 611 and 610(e), which form the backbone of the current U.S. equity market structure. 29 Rule 611 (the "Order Protection Rule") requires trades to execute at the national best bid and offer (NBBO). Rule 610(e) caps access fees exchanges can charge. Both were adopted as part of the 2005 Reg NMS framework. SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda characterized the move as "thoughtful and measured." 30 This is a proposed rule requiring a formal comment period and a separate Commission vote before taking effect.

CFTC — prediction market rules, whistleblower NPRM

The CFTC on June 10 published an NPRM (9249-26) on event contracts, seeking to define which prediction market contract types are permissible under CFTC oversight — specifically targeting contracts tied to war, terrorism, and assassination. 31 The agency simultaneously filed suit against multiple states (including Minnesota and Rhode Island) asserting exclusive federal jurisdiction over prediction markets; the Rhode Island case has not yet been resolved as to venue. 31 On June 11, the CFTC published a separate NPRM (9250-26) on whistleblower program rules. 31

DOJ — $21.3M SDVOSB fraud settlement

The DOJ on June 9 announced that Broadway Electric Inc., Cornerstone Contracting Inc., CEO John Oehler, and President Christian Blake agreed to pay $21.3 million to settle False Claims Act allegations covering April 2017 through May 2025. 32 The scheme involved using Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) entities as pass-through fronts to obtain set-aside federal contracts; the actual work was performed by Broadway and Cornerstone, which received all but a fixed 1–3% fee paid to the fronts. Two whistleblowers — an Air Force veteran and a SDVOSB executive — received $3,674,250 in qui tam shares. DOJ Civil Division AAG Brett Shumate: "Congress intended certain federal contracts to be set aside for small businesses and for service-disabled veterans who sacrificed for this country." 32

FTC — student data, healthcare merger, DEI actions

The FTC finalized four separate actions during the window:
  • June 5: Final order against Illuminate Education for failing to protect K-12 student personal data. 33
  • June 10: Consent order in Sevita Health / BrightSpring acquisition, requiring Sevita to divest facilities in Indiana, Louisiana, and Texas to Dungarvin Group. 34
  • June 9: Diversity Lab — the law firm DEI program operator behind the Mansfield Certification — dissolved following FTC findings that its recruiting practices constituted unlawful DEI-based hiring. 35
  • June 9: FTC mailed refund checks totaling nearly $3 million to 1,821 homeowners deceived by a mortgage relief scam. 35

Federal Reserve — stress test date set, FDTA final rule

The Fed on June 9 announced it will publish 2026 annual bank stress test results on June 24, 2026, at 4:00 PM EDT. 36 On June 11, the Fed issued a final rule establishing data standards for certain information collections under the Financial Data Transparency Act (FDTA), coordinating with the OCC and SEC/CFTC which issued parallel final rules the same day. 36

OCC — GENIUS Act stablecoin reporting forms

The OCC on June 11 published reporting forms and instructions for payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act (Bulletin 2026-24), and separately issued its FDTA final rule (Bulletin 2026-25). 37 No independent enforcement actions were issued by the OCC in the window.

Block Inc. / DOJ — $240M settlement still in negotiation

Block Inc. reserved $240 million in Q1 2026 for a potential DOJ settlement stemming from compliance allegations first raised in Hindenburg Research's 2023 short report targeting the Cash App platform. 38 DOJ proposed settlement terms in March 2026; Block filed a counter-proposal in April, saying it "disputes the basis and method" of the DOJ's assessment. As of June 12, no final resolution has been announced. Block's 10-Q warns that the "reasonably possible" outcome may exceed the reserved amount. The SEC separately notified Block in March that it has closed its investigation with no enforcement recommendation. 38

Personnel

George Gaffin (JPMorgan, Markets Technology Managing Director — previously oversaw macro innovation engineering and FX/emerging markets technology) left JPMorgan in June and joined HSBC New York as CIO of Securities Services. He has nearly 30 years of bank technology experience including early roles at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. 39
Pierre De Belen (Goldman Sachs MD, 20-year veteran, most recently responsible for the open-source financial market data platform Legend) left Goldman Sachs and joined JPMorgan in a role not publicly disclosed. Goldman Sachs declined to comment; JPMorgan and HSBC did not respond to requests. 39
Stephen O'Donnell was appointed COO of ISLA (International Securities Lending Association, London) on June 11. O'Donnell previously spent four years as EMEA Head of Sales and Relationship Management at BNY. Diane Sherman (20+ years capital markets, specializing in tokenization and collateral optimization) joined Ownera on June 9. Charlie Woodcock (20+ years institutional trading and global markets) joined Marex in Hong Kong on June 11. 40
No C-suite appointments or departures at bulge-bracket institutions were confirmed in SEC 8-K Item 5.02 filings during the window.

Cover image: SpaceX Starship launches from Starbase, Texas, May 22, 2026. AP Photo / Eric Gay — editorial use.

参考ソース

  1. 1SpaceX blasts off with a record-breaking $75 billion IPO
  2. 2SPCX stock quote — CNBC
  3. 3SpaceX S-1/A Amendment No. 2, SEC EDGAR
  4. 4SpaceX IPO: the largest in history — CNBC Daily Open
  5. 5SpaceX cuts retail IPO allocation to low 20% range
  6. 6SpaceX (SPCX) lands a $5B order from BlackRock
  7. 7Elon Musk's SpaceX IPO plans reveal blockbuster spending
  8. 8The SpaceX IPO drama explained — NPR/The Indicator
  9. 9Warren questions SpaceX IPO oversight in new letter to stock indexes
  10. 10SpaceX gets $190 price target from 5-star analyst
  11. 112026 recently priced IPOs — Renaissance Capital
  12. 12Parabilis Medicines IPO profile — Renaissance Capital
  13. 13ERock IPO profile — Renaissance Capital
  14. 14WhiteHawk Minerals IPO profile — Renaissance Capital
  15. 15IPO calendar — Renaissance Capital
  16. 16OpenAI confidentially files for IPO — CNBC
  17. 17SPAC research — Boardroom Alpha
  18. 18SPAC market update June 10, 2026 — Boardroom Alpha
  19. 19Reuters M&A news
  20. 20InsideArbitrage event-driven monitor, June 11
  21. 21AvalonBay / Equity Residential leadership announcement — Business Wire
  22. 22Ingredion to buy UK's Tate & Lyle for $3.6 billion — Reuters
  23. 23Barry Diller's People seeks control of MGM Resorts — InsideArbitrage
  24. 24Alphabet seeking $85 billion with stock facing 4-week losing streak — CNBC
  25. 25Apollo, Blackstone back Anthropic's $35 billion capacity expansion — Reuters/Yahoo Finance
  26. 26Amazon takes on $17.5B in new debt as AI spending pushes total borrowing past $225 billion — TNW
  27. 27Meta shares drop 5.5% on report it may raise tens of billions in equity for AI — MLQ
  28. 28Venture capital & startup funding roundup, June 11, 2026 — Tech Startups
  29. 29SEC proposes rescission of Regulation NMS Rules 611 and 610(e)
  30. 30SEC press releases — June 2026
  31. 31CFTC press releases
  32. 32Government contractor and executives to pay $21.3M — DOJ
  33. 33FTC gives final approval to order against Illuminate Education
  34. 34FTC finalizes consent order in Sevita, BrightSpring acquisition
  35. 35FTC press releases
  36. 36Federal Reserve 2026 press releases
  37. 37OCC news and events
  38. 38Block inches closer to DOJ settlement — Payments Dive
  39. 39JPMorgan lost a markets tech MD to HSBC but hired one from Goldman Sachs — eFinancialCareers
  40. 40People moves — Securities Finance Times
  41. 4115b|Forbright IPO profile — Renaissance Capital|https://www.renaissancecapital.com/Profile/FRBT/Forbright/IPO
  42. 4228b|Hut 8 closes $4.25B investment-grade senior secured notes — Stock Titan|https://www.stocktitan.net/news/HUT/hut-8-closes-4-25-billion-of-investment-grade-senior-secured-notes-rne46xy1jowx.html

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