
SpaceX Launches First Bond Sale Seeking $20 Billion as Shares Fall a Third Day
Just ten days after the largest stock-market debut in history, SpaceX is already back for more money. On Monday, June 22, the rocket and satellite company — formally Space Exploration Technologies Corp., trading on the Nasdaq under ticker SPCX — said in a securities filing that it had begun its first-ever bond sale, an offering of senior unsecured notes aimed at raising at least $20 billion. The same filing disclosed a striking figure: roughly $100.8 billion in cash on hand as of June 19, a war chest that now reads more like a sovereign wealth fund’s than a young public company’s. Shares fell for a third straight session on the news.
The purpose is housekeeping more than fresh borrowing. SpaceX said it will use the proceeds to repay, in full, a $20 billion bridge loan it took on in March after merging with Elon Musk’s artificial-intelligence startup xAI, plus related fees, with anything left over going to general corporate needs. That bridge financing had replaced about $17.5 billion in higher-interest debt xAI carried before the deal and was not due until September 2027. By swapping short-term financing for longer-dated bonds, the company locks in funding at steadier rates well ahead of the deadline.
The notes will carry maturities ranging from five to 30 years and were rated investment grade by all three major agencies last week — Baa1 from Moody’s, BBB+ from Fitch, and BBB from S&P Global. The same banks that provided the bridge loan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, are running the bond deal. The notes are being sold to large institutional buyers rather than the general public. SpaceX carries about $29.1 billion in long-term debt against its cash pile, leaving it with a net cash position of roughly $71.7 billion.
Investors did not cheer. SPCX shares dropped about 16% on Monday to around $165, the third straight decline and a roughly 27% retreat from the $225.64 intraday peak hit on June 16. The stock still trades well above its $135 IPO price, and the company’s market value, near $2.16 trillion, remains above the $1.77 trillion that debut implied. But the speed of the new fundraising — barely a week after the company raised about $86 billion in its record IPO — unsettled some buyers, who read it as a sign of heavy spending ahead.
That spending is the real story. SpaceX is racing to turn itself from a launch company into an AI infrastructure giant. On Monday, the company signed a deal worth up to $6.3 billion to supply computing power to open-source AI startup Reflection AI, which will pay $150 million a month from July through the end of 2029 for capacity at SpaceX’s Colossus data-center operation, built around Nvidia chips. SpaceX has struck similar compute agreements with Google and Anthropic valued at roughly $75 billion combined, and has floated the idea of one day building data centers in space.
The scale of the ambition is enormous, and so is the bill. Analysts have estimated SpaceX’s cumulative capital spending could top $1 trillion by 2031 as it scales its Starship rocket and deploys next-generation Starlink satellites. That is the tension bond buyers must weigh: long-term contracts like the Reflection deal make revenue more predictable, which supports cheaper borrowing, but the AI buildout also demands relentless investment in chips, power and facilities that can strain cash flow. Notably, either side can walk away from the Reflection contract after the first three months with 90 days’ notice.
Control of the company stays firmly with its founder. Musk holds about 82% of SpaceX’s voting power through a dual-class share structure, and the IPO already made him the world’s first trillionaire on paper. Market strategist Adam Sarhan noted that issuing bonds lets SpaceX raise money without selling new stock, keeping existing shareholders’ economic stake intact while Musk’s grip on the company remains untouched.
For now, the bond sale forces public investors to decide what kind of business they actually own. Bought as a rocket-and-satellite maker, a $20 billion debt raise so soon after going public looks aggressive. Viewed as an AI infrastructure company with its own launch system and global broadband network, it looks like an opening move. SpaceX reports its first results as a public company in early August, and a share lockup expires in December — two dates that will test whether the market’s early enthusiasm can outlast the spending it is now being asked to fund.
JBizNews Desk
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