SpaceX just became one of the most valuable firms on Earth, and its whole pitch is getting humans to Mars. The people betting real money say that won't happen this decade.
A $2 Trillion Company Built On A Maybe
SpaceX went public Friday and the stock took off. It climbed more than 19% on its first day and pushed past a $2 trillion value.
The IPO filing leaned hard on one idea: Mars. The word showed up 63 times.
CEO Elon Musk's huge stock bonus is tied to that dream. He only gets it if SpaceX builds a Mars colony of more than a million people.
So the company is worth $2 trillion partly on a promise it hasn't kept yet.
We separate the hyped IPOs from the real opportunities in Market Briefs, and joining throws in a free investing masterclass.
The Biggest IPO Ever
The debut was historic on its own. SpaceX priced its shares at $135, and they shot up from there.
The sale raised about $75 billion. That made it the largest IPO on record.
The pop also reshaped the rankings. SpaceX now sits among the most valuable firms in the country.
It lifted Musk's paper wealth too. He is now widely called the world's first trillionaire.
Demand was massive. Big funds and everyday traders piled in on the first day.
The Bettors Aren't Buying The Timeline
Over on Kalshi, a site where people bet real money on real-world events, the mood is colder. Traders give SpaceX just an 18% chance of sending a human to Mars by 2030.
Kalshi lets people bet cash on yes-or-no questions. The price acts like a live odds board.
That bet has been live since March 2024. It has never climbed above one-in-four odds.
The gap is striking. The same crowd cheering the stock doubts its headline goal.
The contract pays out only if SpaceX confirms a crewed Mars trip by the end of 2029. Right now, the crowd thinks that's a long shot.
Even SpaceX Won't Commit
The doubt isn't only on the betting screens. SpaceX said as much in its own filing.
The company warned that many of its goals rely on tech that's unproven or doesn't exist yet. So the timeline could be impossible to predict.
Backing a 2030 Mars landing is like booking a flight with no time on the board. You know where it's going, just not when.
The dream is huge. The clock is the hard part.
What To Watch
The gap between the stock and the Mars bet is the story here. Investors are paying up for the long-term dream, while traders price the near-term odds.
Both can be right. SpaceX can be a great business on rockets, satellites, and launches while Mars stays years away.
Most of its money today comes from launches and Starlink, its satellite internet service. Mars is the dream, not the day job.
For now, the market loves the company. It just doesn't believe the deadline.
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