On Thursday, June 11, 2026, Elon Musk's SpaceX priced the largest initial public offering in the history of global capital markets — raising $75 billion by selling 555.56 million shares at a fixed price of $135 per share. The offering values the rocket, satellite, and artificial intelligence company at $1.77 trillion, instantly making it the seventh-largest publicly traded company in the United States. Trading is expected to begin Friday, June 12, on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol SPCX.
The deal shatters the previous record held by Saudi Aramco, which raised $29.4 billion in its 2019 Riyadh listing. In a single transaction, SpaceX has rewritten the rules of modern finance, upended Wall Street's traditional IPO playbook, and forced every serious investor — from the most seasoned institutional portfolio manager to the first-time retail buyer — to confront a question that has no easy answer: Is this the opportunity of a generation, or the most expensive hype cycle in market history?
A Company Unlike Any That Has Come Before
SpaceX is not simply a rocket company. Founded by Elon Musk in 2002 with the stated mission of making humanity multiplanetary, the firm today operates across three distinct and financially divergent business segments: launch services, satellite internet (Starlink), and artificial intelligence (xAI).
The Starlink satellite internet constellation is the financial engine of the enterprise. In 2025, Starlink generated $11.39 billion in revenue — up 50% year over year — with an operating income exceeding $4.4 billion and an operating margin of approximately 39%. As of the first quarter of 2026, Starlink had 10.3 million subscribers across 164 countries, generating quarterly revenue of $3.26 billion, representing roughly 69% of SpaceX's total revenue. Morningstar's analysts acknowledge a credible path to tens of billions in annual Starlink revenue over the coming decade, with operating margins potentially exceeding 75% as the incremental cost of adding subscribers to an already-deployed satellite constellation approaches zero.
The launch services segment, encompassing Falcon 9 rockets, Dragon spacecraft, and contracts with NASA and the Pentagon, generated $4.1 billion in 2025. SpaceX completed 165 Falcon 9 launches last year — a cadence no government or competitor has come close to matching — and is responsible for more than four-fifths of the total mass launched into orbit over the past three years.
The xAI segment, which Musk merged into SpaceX in an all-stock transaction in February 2026 at a valuation of approximately $80 billion, is the most speculative and the most consequential piece of the investment thesis. The unit recorded operating losses of $6.36 billion in 2025 and is on pace to burn approximately $10 billion in 2026. Its flagship physical asset is the Colossus 1 data center in Memphis, Tennessee, housing 220,000 Nvidia GPUs across 300 megawatts of power. In March 2026, SpaceX announced a landmark compute deal with Anthropic worth $1.25 billion per month through May 2029 — a contract potentially worth $40 billion over its life.
| Business Segment | 2025 Revenue | 2025 Operating Income | Key Metric |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starlink (Satellite Internet) | $11.39B | $4.4B (39% margin) | 10.3M subscribers, 164 countries |
| Launch Services (Falcon 9 / Dragon) | $4.1B | Not disclosed | 165 launches in 2025 |
| xAI (Artificial Intelligence) | ~$3.2B | -$6.36B (loss) | 220,000 Nvidia GPUs, Colossus 1 |
| Total | $18.7B (+33% YoY) | Net loss: -$4.94B | IPO valuation: $1.77 trillion |
The Valuation Debate: Where Analysts Stand
No aspect of the SpaceX IPO has generated more controversy among serious financial analysts than the price. At $135 per share, SpaceX trades at approximately 95 times its 2025 revenue — a multiple with no precedent at this scale, and one that rests almost entirely on faith in future businesses that have not yet been commercially proven.
Goldman Sachs, one of the five joint book-running managers alongside Morgan Stanley, BofA Securities, Citigroup, and J.P. Morgan, anchors the bull case around the AI segment. Goldman projects SpaceX's AI unit will grow revenue from roughly $3.2 billion to approximately $322 billion by 2030 — a roughly hundredfold increase. That single forecast does most of the heavy lifting in any justification of the $1.77 trillion valuation. SpaceX's own prospectus claims the AI division addresses a $26.5 trillion total addressable market.
NYU valuation expert Aswath Damodaran, widely regarded as the dean of equity valuation, placed SpaceX closer to $1.3 trillion using a discounted cash flow model — implying roughly a 26% discount to the IPO price. He publicly flagged the $26.5 trillion AI addressable market claim as pushing beyond what is plausible.
Morningstar offered the most skeptical major institutional assessment, placing SpaceX's fair value at approximately $780 billion — about 55% below the IPO price. Morningstar's most optimistic “Moonshot” scenario yields a value of $1.97 trillion, but requires both a rapidly reusable Starship and commercially successful orbital data centers to simultaneously come to fruition — a combined probability Morningstar assigns at just 7%.
Oppenheimer, meanwhile, initiated coverage with a target price of $190 per share, implying a 41% premium to the IPO price for those who believe in the long-term AI infrastructure thesis.
What Retirement Investors Need to Know
For investors aged 45 and older who are focused on building and protecting retirement wealth, the SpaceX IPO presents a set of considerations that go well beyond the headline excitement. The most important point is one that many retail investors may not fully appreciate: even those who do not actively buy a single share of SPCX may already be exposed to it through their existing portfolios.
The Nasdaq has revised its index eligibility rules specifically to allow mega-cap companies like SpaceX to bypass the standard seasoning period. SPCX could enter the Nasdaq-100 as few as 15 trading days after listing, which would trigger mandatory buying from every index fund, ETF, and passive investment vehicle that tracks that benchmark. MSCI inclusion is expected to create an additional tailwind in the first 30 to 90 trading days post-IPO. This means that anyone holding a Nasdaq-100 ETF, a broad technology fund, or a target-date retirement fund with significant tech exposure will automatically acquire SpaceX shares — whether they choose to or not.
Furthermore, the sheer scale of the offering has the potential to trigger a rotation in tech leadership. As institutional investors trim from existing high-flying chip stocks and other tech names to fund their SpaceX allocations, the broader Nasdaq may experience a period of consolidation or volatility. This week already offered a preview: the S&P 500 was headed for a losing week as investors shifted out of semiconductor stocks and into defensive sectors such as consumer staples.
A Truist Wealth review of 30 major IPOs from the last 15 years found that shares of newly public companies tend to fall and suffer severe drawdowns in their first year. On a median basis, they dropped 9% one year after their debut, with average drawdowns of 54% within those first 12 months. Research by Professor Jay Ritter of the University of Florida shows that firms priced at more than 40 times sales — SpaceX is priced at approximately 95 times sales — have historically trailed the market over three years in 12 of 14 comparable cases.
The Retail Dimension: Unprecedented Access, Unprecedented Risk
SpaceX set aside 30% of IPO shares for retail investors — an unusually large allocation compared to the standard 5–10% reserved for ordinary individuals in deals of this size. Musk also announced the IPO price before the traditional roadshow, bypassing the standard price-discovery process that institutional investors have relied on for decades. These moves have democratized access to one of the most anticipated market events in history, but they also concentrate risk in the hands of buyers who may be least equipped to absorb it.
“I'm a little fearful that this could be a negative experience for a lot of people,” said Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets. “When you hear your own parents asking you questions about it, you know it's a little overhyped.” Woods added: “This isn't a moonshot. This is a long-term investment that will take time to grow into its valuation.”
Lockup periods for early insiders and private investors are expected to expire between September and December 2026, meaning some of the most informed holders will have their first legal opportunity to sell into the market just months after the IPO. Musk will retain 82% of voting power through a dual-class share structure, meaning public shareholders bear all the financial risk of ownership while holding almost no ability to influence corporate direction.
The Broader Market Context
The SpaceX IPO arrives at a moment of genuine tension in financial markets. Inflation rose to 4.2% in May 2026 — above the Federal Reserve's 2% target — driven in part by higher oil prices following U.S. airstrikes on Iran earlier this week. Bond yields are rising, and the next major move from the Federal Reserve is projected to be a rate hike rather than a cut. The Nasdaq had shed more than 7% since hitting an all-time high on June 1 before clawing back some ground on Thursday.
Goldman Sachs has forecast that total U.S. IPO proceeds could quadruple to a record $160 billion in 2026, driven by a pipeline that includes not just SpaceX but also AI giants OpenAI and Anthropic. OpenAI recently raised $122 billion in a private round led by Nvidia and Amazon, while Anthropic secured $65 billion in Series H financing at a $965 billion valuation. The combined capital-raising ambitions of SpaceX, Anthropic, OpenAI, and Alphabet — which recently announced an $84.8 billion equity raise — total approximately $380 billion. Gavekal Research notes this amounts to roughly two months of normal S&P 500 shareholder payouts, suggesting the market can digest the supply — but not without some turbulence.
“I would not be surprised at all if you see a stampede of IPOs that come after this,” said Willy Lee of SuRo Capital. “I think the fact that OpenAI and Anthropic are racing to see who can be first after SpaceX is not a good sign,” countered Justin Bergner of Gabelli Funds. “They're worried that whoever doesn't go first will benefit from reduced demand, or kind of demand fatigue in the market.”

Investment Implications and Forward Outlook
For retirement-focused investors, the SpaceX IPO demands a disciplined, long-term perspective rather than a reactive one. Several actionable considerations stand out.
For those considering buying SPCX directly: The historical base rate for mega-IPOs priced at extreme revenue multiples is unfavorable in the near term. Analysts broadly agree that a better entry point is likely to emerge in the months following the debut, particularly as lockup expirations in late 2026 create selling pressure. A small, speculative allocation — no more than 1–3% of a retirement portfolio — may be appropriate for investors with a long time horizon and high risk tolerance, but only after the initial volatility subsides.
For those holding index funds and ETFs: Passive investors should expect SpaceX to enter the Nasdaq-100 and other major indices within weeks of its debut. This will automatically increase concentration in a single, highly valued, loss-making company. Investors who are concerned about this concentration may wish to review their allocation to Nasdaq-heavy funds and consider rebalancing toward broader market or value-oriented strategies.
For those focused on capital preservation: The current macroeconomic backdrop — rising inflation, higher bond yields, and geopolitical uncertainty from the Iran situation — argues for maintaining a defensive posture. The SpaceX IPO, for all its excitement, does not change the fundamental calculus for investors within 10 years of retirement: capital preservation and income generation should take priority over speculative growth.
Looking further ahead, the long-term bull case for SpaceX rests on three pillars: the continued growth of Starlink's subscriber base and operating margins, the successful commercialization of Starship as a fully reusable heavy-lift vehicle, and the monetization of xAI's computing infrastructure. If all three converge as Goldman Sachs projects, the $1.77 trillion valuation could prove prescient. If execution stumbles — as it has for many high-profile IPOs — the stock could spend years recovering from its debut price. The honest answer, as one analyst put it, is that “people buying the stock are buying into the future and mankind escaping the Earth — not really investing in a company.”
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. Market conditions can change rapidly, and past performance does not guarantee future results. Always conduct your own research and consider consulting with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.



