SpaceX Targets a Record $75 Billion IPO at $135 Per Share

Paul Jackson

June 3, 2026

Key Points

  • SpaceX is reportedly targeting an IPO at $135 per share, aiming to raise $75 billion through the sale of 555.6 million shares.
  • The offering would value the company at roughly $1.75 trillion and is expected to begin formal marketing on June 4, with pricing possible as soon as June 11 and trading around June 12 under the ticker SPCX.
  • SpaceX is taking an unusual route by setting a fixed IPO price ahead of the roadshow, rather than marketing a traditional range.

A giant deal is getting even more unconventional

SpaceX is not just aiming for one of the biggest IPOs ever. It is also doing it in a way that breaks from the standard Wall Street playbook. According to current reporting, the company plans to sell shares at a fixed $135 price to raise $75 billion, rather than opening with a range and letting investor demand shape the final number during the roadshow.

That matters because fixed-price offerings of this size are rare in the US market. For a company already known for ignoring convention, the structure fits the pattern.

The numbers are enormous even by current market standards

At the proposed terms, SpaceX would sell 555.6 million shares in an all-primary offering, meaning the cash goes to the company rather than to existing shareholders. Reuters reported that the company is targeting a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion, with a greenshoe option that could lift the total raise even higher if demand is strong.

That would make this one of the most closely watched listings in market history and easily one of the largest capital raises the public market has ever seen. Reuters also reported that existing shareholders, including Musk, would be blocked from selling for 366 days after the offering.

This is not a clean “buy the fundamentals” story

SpaceX is still a hard company to value conventionally.

Reuters reported that the company generated $18.67 billion in revenue in 2025 but posted a $4.94 billion net loss, with Starlink remaining its main profitable segment.

That leaves investors paying mostly for future scale, future monetization, and Musk’s ability to keep extending the company beyond launch and satellite connectivity into AI, orbital infrastructure, and other long-duration businesses. It is a powerful narrative. It is not a cheap one.

The timing says a lot about the market

SpaceX is moving into a market that is clearly open again for giant growth stories.

Reuters noted that the company’s listing is expected to be followed by other major tech offerings, including OpenAI and Anthropic. That puts SpaceX at the front of what could become a new wave of blockbuster IPOs tied to AI, infrastructure, and frontier technology.

That backdrop matters because appetite for large-cap tech stories remains strong, even with rates elevated and valuation questions still hanging over the market.

The structure also reinforces one larger theme: control

A fixed-price IPO of this size is not just unusual. It is another reminder that Musk still prefers to shape the terms of engagement rather than inherit them from Wall Street.

That does not make the deal bad. It does, however, tell investors exactly what kind of public company they are buying into: one where conventional governance expectations, traditional IPO choreography, and ordinary market norms are not likely to be the guiding principles.

WSA Take

SpaceX is trying to come public at a size, valuation, and structure that only a handful of companies in history could even attempt. The market may still buy it, because appetite for rare, dominant, story-rich assets remains very real. But investors should be clear about what they are paying for.

This is not a classic public-market value proposition. It is a premium-priced bet on scale, scarcity, and Elon Musk’s ability to keep turning a capital-intensive space company into something much larger than that.

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Disclaimer

WallStAccess is a financial media platform providing market commentary and analysis for informational and educational purposes only. This content does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Readers should conduct their own research or consult a licensed financial professional before making investment decisions.

Author

Paul Jackson

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