For SpaceX Employees & Shareholders

Your SpaceX Equity Built Real Wealth. Let's Make Sure It Lasts.

Vested shares, ISOs, RSUs, tender offers; more of your net worth sits in one company every year. The same company that signs your paycheck. Amplius helps SpaceX shareholders turn concentrated equity into a diversified, tax-smart plan, on your timeline and on your terms.

Independent. Fiduciary. We answer to you—not a parent company, not a product shelf.
The Risk

Nobody Decides to Be Over-Concentrated. It Just Happens.

You didn't set out to put most of your wealth in one stock. It accumulated, RSUs settle, ISO spreads widen as the 409A climbs. Tender offers come and go, and the position keeps growing. One day you run the numbers and 70–90% of your net worth is SpaceX, alongside your salary, your benefits, and your career.

That isn't conviction. That's exposure.

Holding longer can feel like the smart move. The story is strong, the trajectory has been remarkable, and selling feels like leaving money on the table. But a diversified plan isn't a bet against SpaceX; it's a decision to preserve the wealth you've already earned.

50% → 100%

The math is unforgiving: a 50% decline requires a 100% gain just to break even. If 80% of your net worth is one stock and it falls 40%, your total net worth drops 32%. Research from J.P. Morgan Asset Management has found that a significant share of individual stocks (on the order of 40%) suffer catastrophic declines they never fully recover from, and the figure runs higher for technology companies. Private markets can mask volatility; public markets don't.

Three ways concentration gradually raises the stakes:

The asymmetry of loss

Gains and losses aren't symmetrical. Down 50% needs up 100%. A diversified portfolio doesn't just grow; it survives the cycles that let compounding work.

The double-dependency trap

Your paycheck, benefits, equity, and career all trace back to one company. A single change at SpaceX can touch all of them at once.

The liquidity illusion

Pre-IPO shares aren't cash. You can't sell on a bad day. Tender windows are periodic and can be cut back. Your net worth on paper may not be your net worth when you need it.

Interactive Tools

See Where You Actually Stand

Most SpaceX shareholders sense they're concentrated, but few have put a number on it. Taking about a minute each, these tools are educational estimates, a starting point for a real conversation, not a recommendation.

Concentration Risk Score

Measure your total SpaceX exposure across wealth, income, and liquidity.

$
$
$
$
$
$

For educational purposes only. Not investment or tax advice.

/ 100
Lower riskModerateHigher risk
SpaceX % of net worth
Total vested net worth
If SpaceX drops 40%
Non-SpaceX liquid assets
Runway w/o SpaceX
Income dependency
Enter your numbers and calculate to see your concentration risk score.

From Equity to Income

Model how diversified proceeds could generate income that doesn't depend on your time.

$
$
40%
28%

For educational purposes only. Not investment or tax advice.

Today
After diversifying
SpaceXDiversified
Amount diversified
After-tax proceeds added

Sustainable annual income your diversified base could produce:

Conservative · 3%
per year
Aggressive · 5%
per year

Withdrawal-rate ranges draw on long-standing safe-withdrawal research. They are illustrations, not guarantees; actual results depend on allocation, fees, market conditions, and your full financial picture.

The Playbook

7 Ways to Reduce Risk Without a Reactive Sell-Off

Diversifying a concentrated position is rarely one move. It's a coordinated set of them, sequenced across tax years to keep more of what you've built. These are the strategies in the Amplius Concentrated Stock Playbook. The right mix depends entirely on your basis, your timeline, and your goals.

1

Equity Collar

Protect the downside without selling today

A collar wraps your stock in a protective band: buy a put to set a floor, sell a call to help pay for it. Often structured at low or zero net cost. You keep ownership while capping the worst case. The trade-off: Your upside is capped too.

2

Long/Short Tax-Loss Harvesting

Diversification with daily liquidity

A long/short portfolio tracks the market while systematically harvesting losses. Those losses can offset the gains from selling concentrated stock. No multi-year lockup, you own the securities directly, and first-year harvested losses can be a noteworthy share of invested capital.

3

Exchange Fund Replication (EFR)

A flexible alternative to exchange funds

EFR uses options to cut single-stock risk substantially and replace it with broad-market exposure—without a taxable event today. Daily liquidity, standard 1099 reporting, no qualified-purchaser requirement, and no seven-year lockup.

4

Traditional Exchange Funds

Immediate diversification, deferred tax

Contribute your shares into a pooled partnership and receive a diversified basket in return (no tax at contribution). The classic tool, but harder to use now: strict eligibility, a seven-year lockup, and higher fees.

5

Qualified Opportunity Zones (QOZ)

Defer tax, add real assets

Reinvest capital gains into opportunity zone real estate for a "triple" benefit: defer the original gain, step-up basis over time, and (if held 10+ years) pay no tax on the QOZ investment's own growth. Made permanent under recent legislation.

6

Covered Call

Get paid while you wait for your price

Sell a call above today's price and collect cash now. You're effectively paid to set a limit order at a price you'd be glad to sell at. The trade-off: Upside above the strike goes to the buyer.

7

Philanthropic Planning

Turn a tax bill into impact

If you're already charitably inclined, donating appreciated stock can beat donating cash. A donor-advised fund lets you "bunch" deductions in a high-income year; a charitable remainder trust can diversify inside the trust and pay you an income stream. Capital gains on donated shares may be avoided entirely.

What Coordinated Planning Can Look Like

Hypothetical: $10M in SpaceX stock, $100K cost basis, 23.8% federal rate on long-term gains.

The reactive path
$1,414,000

Estimated tax bill from selling $6M of stock outright.

The planned path
$643,195

Retain $3.75M (hold, collar, and EFR) and address $6.25M through a coordinated mix: long/short tax-loss harvesting, a qualified opportunity zone, an exchange fund, and a donor-advised fund.

First-year tax savings
~$829,430

About a 56% reduction. The collar and EFR reduce SpaceX risk further with no current tax.

Hypothetical illustration. Figures are estimates for educational purposes only and will vary with your facts. Not investment or tax advice.

Concentrated Stock Playbook — Amplius Wealth Advisors eGuide cover
Free E-Guide

Get the Complete Concentrated Stock Playbook

The strategies above, in one place, with side-by-side comparisons, illustrative numbers, and a clear next-step road map. Written specifically for SpaceX shareholders weighing how and when to diversify.

  • All 7 diversification and tax strategies, in plain terms
  • Exchange funds, EFR, and tax-loss harvesting compared side by side
  • An illustrative road map for what to do now versus later
ISO & RSU Planning

Two Kinds of Equity. Two Very Different Tax Stories.

ISOs and RSUs both build wealth, and each carries its own decisions, deadlines, and tax treatment. Getting them right is where a lot of value is won or lost.

Incentive Stock Options

ISOs — leverage, with a tax catch

ISOs give you the right to buy shares at a fixed strike price. The leverage is real, and so is the complexity. Exercising and holding can trigger the alternative minimum tax (AMT) on the "spread" between your strike and the current 409A value—even though you haven't sold a thing. Exercise early enough and you start the clock toward long-term capital gains treatment. Wait too long, and a rising 409A can make exercising prohibitively expensive; and a departure usually starts a tight 90-day window to act.

The art is exercising enough each year to make progress without an outsized AMT surprise. That's what the calculator below estimates.

Restricted Stock Units

RSUs — simpler, with one trap

RSUs are more straightforward, with one catch to plan around. They're taxed as ordinary income on their full value when they settle. For a pre-IPO company, that's often "double-trigger"; settlement waits for a liquidity event. When it lands, it can be large, and standard payroll withholding (frequently 22%) routinely falls short of what a high earner actually owes. The gap becomes an April surprise. A "sell-on-vest" default and a withholding check keep that from happening.

ISO Exercise & AMT Estimator

Estimate the cash to exercise and the potential AMT impact of exercising and holding.

#
$
$
$

A rough, educational estimate using 2025 federal figures and a simplified AMT calculation. It ignores state tax, other AMT adjustments, and credits. Your actual result depends on your full return, so confirm with your CPA before exercising.

Cash to exercise
Bargain element (AMT spread)
Estimated additional AMT
Effective all-in cost per share
Exercising and holding ISOs can create AMT on the spread — before you've sold anything. Planning the size and timing of each exercise is how you avoid a surprise.

RSU Tax Estimator

Estimate the tax due when RSUs settle—and the gap typical withholding can leave.

#
$
$
%

A rough, educational estimate using 2025 federal figures. Actual tax depends on your full return, your state, and your employer's withholding, so confirm with your CPA.

Gross RSU value
Federal income tax
Additional Medicare (0.9%)
State tax
Total estimated tax
Effective rate
Estimated net, after tax
Calculate to compare typical 22% withholding against your estimated actual tax.
How We Help

A Clear Path From Concentrated to Confident

Concentrated-stock planning works best when tax strategy, risk management, and investment design are coordinated, then implemented with discipline. Here's how that runs at Amplius.

1

Map your exposure

We quantify the real number, vested and unvested equity, ISOs, RSUs, and how it all sits against the rest of your financial life. Most people are more concentrated than they think.

2

Set your target

We define the point where your diversified portfolio can sustain your life without depending on any single stock. That target turns "Should I sell?" into "Here's the plan."

3

Build the tax-smart path

We sequence sales, exercises, hedges, and gifts across multiple tax years (using the playbook strategies that fit your basis and timeline) to keep more of what you've built.

4

Diversify and deploy

Proceeds move into a diversified portfolio designed to grow, weather cycles, and eventually produce income. Concentrated equity becomes a durable, independent asset base.

As an independent fiduciary firm, Amplius is paid to advise, not sell you a product. Every recommendation answers one question: Is this right for you?

Let's Talk

How Concentrated Are You, Really?

A short, no-pressure conversation is the fastest way to find out. We'll look at your actual position, talk through the tax-aware paths open to you, and outline what to consider now versus later. No obligation, no jargon.

  • A clear read on your concentration and risk
  • The tax-aware options on the table: sell, hedge, donate, exchange, defer
  • A practical sense of what to do now versus later
Questions

Concentration, ISOs & RSUs — The Questions That Matter

How much SpaceX stock is too much?
There's no single number, but most planning frameworks flag any one stock above 10–15% of net worth as significant uncompensated risk. For pre-IPO SpaceX shareholders, real-world concentration is often 70–90% simply because of how equity comp and limited liquidity work. Instead of aiming to hit 10% overnight, the goal is to set a target and reduce deliberately at each liquidity window.
Won't I miss the upside if I diversify?
Diversifying doesn't mean exiting. Moving from, say, 80% to 30%, SpaceX still leaves you a substantial position and upside. What changes is the damage a downturn can do. At 80% concentration, a 40% drop costs 32% of your net worth; at 30%, the same drop costs 12%. The upside case adds comfort, the downside case removes security. That asymmetry is the whole argument.
How do I diversify while SpaceX is still private?
Illiquidity limits the options but doesn't remove them. Tender offers are your primary liquidity windows. ISOs can be exercised within an AMT-aware range each year to start the long-term capital gains clock. Hedging strategies like a collar or exchange fund replication can reduce risk now without a sale. And every dollar of salary and bonus directed into diversified accounts shifts the mix in your favor.
Should I just wait until after the IPO?
Waiting is the default, and it's usually a mistake. After an IPO there's typically a lockup, then a wave of employees and insiders selling at once, often in a year when IPO-related income pushes you into a top bracket. The shareholders who keep the most tend to start planning before the IPO, not after.
What's the difference between an ISO and an RSU, in plain terms?
An ISO is the right to buy shares at a set price; you choose when to exercise, and exercising-and-holding can trigger AMT on the spread. An RSU is a share you receive outright once it settles; it's taxed as ordinary income on its full value at that moment. Different decisions, different deadlines, different tax outcomes—which is why they should be planned together.
Does Amplius sell investment products?
No. Amplius is an independent, fiduciary Registered Investment Adviser. We're compensated for advice, not for steering you into proprietary products. That independence is the point; it's what lets us recommend the path that's genuinely best for you.

Important Disclosures

For educational purposes only. Not investment, tax, or legal advice. Amplius Wealth Advisors, LLC (“Amplius Wealth”) is a Registered Investment Advisor (“RIA”) with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). Amplius Wealth provides investment advisory and related services to clients. Amplius Wealth will notice file and/or register in such jurisdictions as required by the SEC or various state regulators. Amplius Wealth renders individualized responses only after complying with regulatory requirements or pursuant to an applicable state exemption or exclusion. Nothing provided herein constitutes tax advice. Individuals should seek the advice of their own tax advisor for specific information regarding tax consequences of investments. Investments in securities entail risk and are not suitable for all investors. This is not a recommendation nor an offer to sell (or solicitation of an offer to buy) securities in the United States or in any other jurisdiction. This website is intended to provide general information about Amplius Wealth and its team. It is not intended to offer investment advice or to recommend the purchase or sale of any investment product. Information is provided to learn about our advisory services and our people as well as to contact us for further information. Market data, articles and other content on this web site are based on generally available information and are believed to be reliable. Amplius Wealth does not guarantee the accuracy of the information contained on this website. The information is of a general nature and should not be construed as investment advice. Amplius Wealth will provide all prospective clients with a copy of our current Form ADV Part 2A (“Disclosure Brochure”), Form CRS (“Client Relationship Summary”) and the Brochure Supplement for each advisory person supporting a particular client. You may obtain a copy of these disclosures on the SEC website at http://adviserinfo.sec.gov or you may contact us to request a copy.