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#SpaceXTargets1.75TrillionIPO
SpaceX is preparing what could become the largest initial public offering in history, targeting a valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion.
The offering is expected to take place as early as next week, according to multiple sources including Reuters and the Wall Street Journal.
The company plans to sell under 5% of its total shares, which is a significantly smaller portion than what is typical in an IPO.
This would translate to roughly $60 billion to $80 billion worth of shares being offered to public investors.
The valuation figure of $1.75 trillion includes a greenshoe option,
which is an over-allotment mechanism that allows underwriters to sell additional shares if demand exceeds expectations.
This IPO would shatter the previous record set by Saudi Aramco's $29 billion offering in 2019, making it by far the largest stock market debut ever. At $1.75 trillion
, SpaceX would immediately rank among the most valuable publicly traded companies in the world,
alongside Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia.
The valuation journey has been notable. SpaceX initially targeted a valuation above $2 trillion,
but after consultations with advisers and investors, the target was first lowered to at least $1.8 trillion and then settled around $1.75 trillion.
The adjustment reflects a balancing act between the company's ambitious narrative and what institutional investors are willing to support.
What makes this IPO particularly unique is the merger with Elon Musk's xAI
, which has transformed SpaceX from a pure aerospace company into a combined space-and-AI platform.
SpaceX has stated that AI represents $26.5 trillion of its $28.5 trillion quantifiable total addressable market.
The company has also entered into an agreement for Anthropic to pay $1.25 billion per month through May 2029 for AI computing capacity,
effectively leveraging Starlink's infrastructure as a revenue-generating AI compute backbone.
However, there are important considerations for potential investors
. Morningstar has issued research coverage valuing SpaceX at $780 billion with a narrow economic moat rating, suggesting the company may be significantly overvalued at the IPO price.
The concern is that SpaceX is not currently profitable as a standalone entity, and the AI buildout ties Starlink's cash flow to a costly expansion that may not guarantee returns.
There is also worry that after the initial hype-driven surge, early investors and insiders could cash out, causing the stock to decline as the narrative faces scrutiny.
The small float of under 5% adds another layer of complexity. With so few shares available, the stock could experience extreme volatility in early trading.
Limited supply combined with enormous demand from retail and institutional investors seeking AI exposure could push shares well above the offering price initially
, but the thin float also means that even moderate selling pressure could cause sharp declines.
The Nasdaq 100 Index inclusion is expected to occur just 15 trading days after the IPO, which is unprecedented and would force index-tracking funds to buy shares regardless of valuation concerns, creating an additional demand catalyst in the near term.
For the broader space sector, this IPO could produce a knock-on effect.
Existing public space stocks may see increased attention, but some analysts warn that investors could sell smaller, less dominant players to allocate capital toward SpaceX instead.
This is a historic moment for global capital markets.
The combination of space infrastructure, satellite connectivity, and AI computing wrapped into a single company at a near-two-trillion-dollar valuation is unlike anything the market has seen before.
Whether the valuation proves justified over the long term will depend on SpaceX's ability to convert its massive addressable market into sustainable profitability, and whether the AI revenue streams being built onto Starlink's backbone can deliver the cash flows needed to support the price.
#SpaceX #IPO #SpaceAndAI