Gina Rinehart built a fortune digging iron ore out of the Australian outback.
Her biggest bet ever outside that business is rockets. She just put more than $1 billion into Elon Musk's SpaceX.
The Bet
Rinehart made the bet through her firm, Hancock Prospecting. The stake is worth more than $1 billion.
That makes it her largest ever outside iron ore. Iron ore is the rock that built her fortune.
Hancock is one of the world's biggest iron ore exporters. That business made her Australia's richest person.
She confirmed the move on Monday. Hancock was handed shares in SpaceX's stock listing last week.
That listing was the largest ever. SpaceX ended its first day worth about $2.1 trillion.
That made it one of the most valuable listed firms anywhere. The timing made the buy look smart.
Rinehart called SpaceX "a rare business." She pointed to its leadership and its long-term promise.
She framed the buy as more than a trade. She cast it as a bet on backing new tech in the West.
We cover the money moves billionaires are making in Market Briefs, and joining comes with a free investing masterclass.
Why An Iron-Ore Giant Is Buying Into Rockets
Here is the part that is easy to miss. This may be less about rockets and more about rare earths.
Hancock has said it sees room to work with SpaceX on critical minerals. Those are the raw materials behind a lot of high tech.
Rinehart has quietly built a big rare-earths stash outside China. She holds stakes in Lynas and MP Materials.
Rare earths are vital for magnets, chips and rockets. China controls most of the supply today.
The West wants its own sources, and that is the gap she is filling. So she is not just buying a hot stock.
She is buying a seat next to a future customer. That seat sits one step up her own supply chain.
This is the kind of move worth watching if you like following smart money. Big investors rarely make a bet this large by accident.
She has spent years buying into critical minerals. This stake ties that work to the space race.
Worth Noting
There is a flip side here. A $2.1 trillion price tag on day one is built on a future that has not arrived.
The listing drew a wave of small investors. That helped push the value sky-high on day one.
Hancock says it has no plans to invest in space beyond SpaceX. So this is one big, hard-to-sell bet.
The minerals tie-up is also still a maybe, not a signed deal. A lot has to go right for it to pay off.
Still, the move shows where she sees the future. It runs through minerals, rockets and AI.
For now, it is one giant bet on Musk, and a hope that the minerals follow.
Want billion-dollar bets explained in plain English each morning? Join Market Briefs and get a free 45-minute course on finding investments.
