SpaceX is really three companies wearing one name. There are the rockets. There is the satellite internet. And there is the AI arm.
Only one of them makes money right now.
Investors just priced the whole package at $1.77 trillion.
The $1.77 Trillion Bet
SpaceX sold 555.6 million shares. Each one went for $135. That raised $75 billion. It is the biggest IPO ever recorded.
The price makes SpaceX the seventh most valuable public company in the U.S. That puts it just ahead of Tesla.
It beats every IPO before it by a wide margin. Some on Wall Street still call the price a stretch. It works out to about 40 times this year's expected sales.
For a firm built on launching rockets, that is a lot of faith priced in on day one.
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Three Moonshots, One Cash Register
Steve Westly is a former Tesla board member. He called SpaceX "three moonshots in one company." His read is simple. At least two of those three bets need to pay off to justify the price.
Here is what each moonshot does. The rockets launch satellites and cargo into space. Starlink beams internet down from orbit. The AI arm builds the Grok chatbot and runs the social network X.
Here is the catch. Only Starlink makes a profit today. Starlink is the satellite internet service, and it brings in most of the money.
Starlink is not small, either. It already has more than 10 million users. They connect through a web of more than 9,000 satellites.
The other two are still spending toward their payoff. Those are the rockets and the AI arm, xAI. Musk merged in xAI earlier this year.
Think of it like buying three lottery tickets. One already pays a steady check. You are betting the other two hit too.
Westly knows the Musk world well. He spent years on Tesla's board before he started his own fund.
He now runs a venture fund called The Westly Group. He said the IPO was hard to price. The three businesses, he said, are "completely disparate." That is a fancy way of saying they have almost nothing in common.
So how do you value a rocket maker, an internet provider, and an AI lab at once? You do not, really. You bet on the man tying them together.
What To Watch
Westly thinks Musk will fold Tesla into SpaceX someday. He called that "absolutely likely." That holds even with the messy questions over who would run the joined company.
It would staple a fourth business onto the pile.
For now, investors are paying a rocket-sized price for one steady business and two big maybes. The next few years decide if the maybes pay off.
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