New York, May 4, 2026, 14:04 EDT
Destiny Tech100 Inc. surged 13.4% Monday afternoon, grabbing attention on the NYSE as traders snapped up shares for a shot at private-tech holdings like SpaceX, OpenAI, and Databricks. Shares were last seen changing hands at $39.36, off a high of $39.82, with more than 3.66 million shares already traded.
This is notable: Destiny Tech100 operates as a closed-end fund, so its shares aren’t tied directly to portfolio value and can swing well above or below that mark. According to the most recent audit, the fund’s NAV as of Dec. 31 was $19.93 per share. Monday’s closing price? Nearly double that figure—about 97% higher than the reported value.
The trade boils down to that gap. Buyers aren’t only picking up the last disclosed portfolio—they’re also after access, scarcity, and the possibility those private AI and space bets get marked up ahead of when regular investors have a shot at them.
SpaceX sits at the top of Destiny Tech100’s portfolio, making up 16.2% of its economic exposure. Shield AI follows at 4.1%, with Databricks close behind at 4.0%. OpenEvidence and xAI are tied at 3.5% each. As of Dec. 31, nearly half—47.3%—of the unaudited portfolio sits in cash equivalents. That gives the fund firepower, but also throws the premium into sharper relief.
Back in February, the fund disclosed it had wrapped up three more deals post-year-end, putting roughly $127 million toward Anthropic, CHAOS Industries, and Hermeus. “Destiny Tech100 was created to unlock access to the world’s most ambitious private companies,” CEO Sohail Prasad said then. Business Wire
The filing supplement also noted Destiny Tech100’s at-the-market stock sale program, capped at $1 billion. In the fourth quarter, the fund moved 8,121,853 shares, pulling in net proceeds of roughly $244.6 million. These types of programs allow closed-end funds to pull in fresh capital when shares are hot, but they bring share count and per-share metrics into sharper focus for investors.
Destiny Tech100 has some company now in the public market’s hunt for private tech. Robinhood’s RVI fund started trading in March, featuring names like Databricks, Ramp, and Revolut. Fundrise’s VCX, meanwhile, is aimed at private tech plays spanning AI, machine learning, data infrastructure, and software.
The danger: premiums can vanish before portfolios catch up. “Trading at a massive premium and then seeing the premium quickly collapse is not unique to Fundrise Innovation, as we saw the same pattern occur with Destiny Tech100,” Jack Shannon, equity strategies principal at Morningstar Inc., told Bloomberg in March. Mark Klein, CEO of Suro Capital, emphasized that investors need to know exactly what’s in the fund, how those assets are valued, and if the market price still lines up with those numbers. mint
Destiny Tech100’s prospectus doesn’t mince words: expect volatility in both share price and trading volume. Closed-end funds like this often see their stock trade below net asset value. Risks stack up with venture-backed holdings—think scant public data, brief track records, and no guarantees that portfolio firms deliver the exits investors are hoping for.
DXYZ isn’t acting much like a traditional fund lately—it’s moving more in sync with whatever mood is driving private AI and space bets. That cuts both ways. A hot day in the sector and the premium jumps, but if valuations get knocked back or trading turns soft, the stock could quickly slide back to its underlying portfolio value.