- June 30, 2026
- Updated 11:53 pm
SpaceX Prepares For Historic IPO As Company Eyes Astronomical Valuation
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- admin
- May 22, 2026
- Technology
SpaceX, led by Elon Musk, is gearing up for a significant launch at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral scheduled for September 9, 2024. The company is also preparing to go public, potentially marking the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history.
The space-launch company filed financial information with regulators to proceed with an IPO, aiming to raise an estimated $80 billion. This target eclipses Saudi Aramco’s $29 billion raise in 2019. Success in this venture could value SpaceX at over $1 trillion, ranking it among the world’s most valuable companies, surpassing even Musk’s Tesla.
Elon Musk, owning 85% of the voting power in SpaceX, stands to become the world’s first trillionaire with this IPO.
SpaceX’s public offering is highly anticipated, following confidential paperwork filed earlier this year with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. If successful, it can catalyze an exciting year for Wall Street, which awaits listings from AI companies like OpenAI and Anthropic.
SpaceX established dominance in space launches, boasting reusable rockets and the satellite internet service Starlink. The firm’s ambitions include orbital data centers and moon bases, as well as human missions to Mars.
The company’s financial endeavors show a substantial capital spending increase, with xAI spending $12.7 billion on data centers and more than $3 billion developing Starship. In the first quarter, SpaceX’s rocket and AI segments lost money, while Starlink posted a $1.2 billion profit.
SpaceX reported a net loss of $4.3 billion on $4.7 billion in revenue from January to March.
IPOs offer public investors the chance to own shares in high-profile enterprises. While they generate substantial capital, there are risks involved, such as potential underperformance post-IPO. Franco Granda from PitchBook notes the intense scrutiny companies face post-public offering and the challenges in justifying high valuations.
Elon Musk remains integral to SpaceX’s identity. He founded the company in 2002 with the goal of colonizing Mars. Under his leadership, SpaceX secured contracts for defense satellites and commercial payloads, as well as NASA missions.
SpaceX rockets managed 85% of launches last year, eclipsing nation-state efforts from China and Russia. Despite launching prowess, Starlink remains the primary revenue source.
According to TMF Associates, SpaceX’s connectivity division amassed $11.4 billion compared to $4.1 billion from launches and $3.2 billion from AI in 2025.
Tim Farrar of TMF Associates suggests the company’s valuation heavily relies on belief in Musk rather than current business performance.
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