Elon Musk’s SpaceX prepares to rank among the world’s most valuable public companies. The rocket, space tech, and Starlink builder filed confidentially for an initial public offering (IPO) on Wednesday. This move opens shares to stock market trading.
Analysts project SpaceX’s value will exceed $1 trillion post-IPO. Musk’s stake positions him to become the first trillionaire.
SpaceX aims for a June public debut, per Bloomberg, Reuters, and New York Times reports. The confidential US SEC filing shields details during regulator review. Executives will next pitch big investors via roadshow meetings.
The IPO seeks to raise $50 billion or more. Earlier this year, SpaceX absorbed Musk’s xAI AI venture in an all-stock deal. This merger crowned SpaceX the world’s top private company at $1.25 trillion valuation.
Musk weaves his firms tighter. xAI, home to Grok chatbot, took over X (formerly Twitter) last year. Pitchbook analyst Emily Zheng notes the xAI-SpaceX tie shows cost consolidation and resource sharing for investors.
SpaceX craves cash for massive expansion. Compute, infrastructure, and energy costs soar with ambitions. Tesla invested over $2 billion in xAI; Musk shifts Tesla production toward xAI-powered robots, with Grok already in some vehicles.
SpaceX joins Tesla and xAI in Musk’s Terafab chipmaking project. “Tesla, xAI, and SpaceX achieved the impossible,” Musk declared last month.
Musk founded SpaceX in 2002 to slash launch costs via reusable rockets. NASA contracted them in 2006. Today, rockets and global Starlink internet dominate, but Musk eyes AI space data centers and a self-sufficient Mars city.
