
HAWTHORNE, Calif. — Elon Musk’s SpaceX is days away from what could become the largest stock-market debut in history, and the terms are now set.
In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, SpaceX fixed its offering price at $135 per share, with trading scheduled to begin Friday, June 12, 2026, on the Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX. At that price, the company would raise approximately $75 billion and carry a valuation of roughly $1.77 trillion, surpassing the size of every previous initial public offering.
The scale is difficult to overstate.
A valuation of $1.77 trillion would immediately place SpaceX among the most valuable publicly traded companies in America, despite generating only a fraction of the revenue of many firms already occupying the top tier of the market.
The offering is being led by Goldman Sachs, with Morgan Stanley playing a central role in distributing shares to individual investors. The underwriting syndicate includes more than twenty major financial institutions.
At its core, SpaceX is built on two businesses.
The first is its rocket-launch operation, which has transformed the economics of space transportation through reusable rockets. The second is Starlink, the company’s rapidly growing satellite internet network, which now serves more than 9 million customers worldwide and has become the primary driver behind SpaceX’s valuation.
According to company filings, SpaceX generated approximately $18.67 billion in revenue during 2025 but still reported a net loss of roughly $4.9 billion as it continued investing aggressively in expansion, satellite deployment, and development of its next-generation Starship rocket system.
That gap between revenue and profitability sits at the heart of the investment debate.
At its proposed valuation, investors are effectively betting that Starlink will continue growing rapidly while Starship eventually opens entirely new markets in cargo transport, satellite deployment, national defense, and potentially human spaceflight.
The numbers imply extraordinary expectations.
At more than 100 times annual sales, SpaceX would trade at a valuation rarely seen among companies of its size. Such pricing assumes years of continued growth and successful execution.
Any major delays, cost overruns, regulatory setbacks, or technical challenges could quickly alter investor sentiment.
There is also a governance issue that ordinary investors should understand.
Through a special class of super-voting shares, Musk will retain approximately 85% of voting control, meaning public shareholders will have very limited influence over company decisions.
In practical terms, buying SpaceX stock is largely a vote of confidence in Musk’s leadership and long-term vision.
The timing is particularly noteworthy because SpaceX is not the only technology giant preparing to enter public markets.
OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, confirmed Monday that it has confidentially filed paperwork for its own public offering. Rival AI company Anthropic reportedly submitted confidential documents approximately a week earlier.
Together, the three companies represent one of the largest concentrations of private-market value ever attempting to enter public markets within a single quarter.
That creates another layer of importance for Friday’s debut.
Whoever lists first often establishes the valuation benchmark for companies that follow. A strong reception for SpaceX could improve conditions for OpenAI and Anthropic. A weak reception could force later offerings to reassess pricing expectations.
For everyday investors, the most important lesson is simple.
The offering price establishes only the starting point. Once trading begins Friday morning, the market will determine what SpaceX is actually worth.
History is filled with highly anticipated IPOs that surged, collapsed, or moved unpredictably once real buyers and sellers entered the market.
For now, SpaceX remains one of the most ambitious companies in the world, combining space exploration, satellite communications, artificial intelligence infrastructure, and national-security contracts under one roof.
Friday will mark the first time public investors have an opportunity to place their own value on that vision.
The filing may have set the price. The market will decide whether it agrees.
JBizNews Desk
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