Elon Musk could collect the biggest pay package any boss has ever been given. To unlock the whole thing, he has to put a million humans on Mars.
That is not a metaphor. It is in the IPO paperwork.
The Pay Package, In Plain English
SpaceX filed its IPO papers this week. The headline number is staggering.
Under the new deal, Musk picks up one billion fresh restricted shares. That is on top of the roughly five billion he already owns.
At the expected IPO value of $1.75 trillion, his current stake is worth about $700 billion. The new grant could be worth another $600 billion on top of that.
That is how you get to a total close to $760 billion. The new shares only vest if SpaceX hits two specific goals.
The market cap has to climb to $7.5 trillion. There also has to be a permanent human colony on Mars with at least one million people.
Hit both and Musk earns the largest equity package in corporate history. Miss either and the new shares stay locked.
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What The Filing Says SpaceX Actually Is
The pay deal is not the most telling part of the filing. The mission statement is.
SpaceX is now openly framing itself as a Mars colony firm, not a rocket firm. Starlink, the launch business, and the AI unit from the xAI merger are all framed as steps to get people off Earth.
The math is rough on the way there. The combined firm posted a $4.3 billion loss in the first quarter.
Most of that was because xAI is bleeding cash. Starlink and the launch business stayed in the green.
Starlink alone pulled in more than $11 billion in revenue last year. That is the part of the business really paying the bills.
The filing also leans hard on the long-shot bet idea. NASA advisor Paul Sutter compared Musk's Mars plan to a camping trip.
He said it is like booking the trip without buying any supplies. That is the bear case in one line.
Worth Watching
The IPO is set for next month. The shares Musk would really collect depend on the order book.
It depends on whether public market buyers want to fund a Mars supply chain. Or whether they only want the rocket business they thought they were buying.
The clearest read will be the order book on IPO day. A big book says the market is willing to pay for the Mars story.
A weak book says buyers only want Starlink and launches at a saner price.
There is a deeper question for buyers, too. Mixing a profitable launch business with a money-losing AI unit changes the risk profile.
Starlink alone might be worth more on its own than the combined firm. That kind of math tends to draw activist investors fast.
For now, the market has to decide what kind of firm SpaceX is. A rocket and satellite company with steady cash flow.
Or a moonshot stock priced on a goal that may never arrive. The pay package suggests Musk wants buyers to see it as the second one.
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