Most IPO filings are full of dry numbers about revenue, expenses, and risk factors. SpaceX dropped one on Wednesday that included a number nobody expected to see: 18,712.
That's how many bitcoin Elon Musk's aerospace company is bringing onto the public markets, with a fair value at recent prices around $1.45 billion. The cost basis is $661 million, which puts the unrealized gain near $789 million.
The Seventh-Largest Public Bitcoin Holder, About To Be Listed
SpaceX bought its bitcoin back in 2021, around the same time Tesla made its own $1.5 billion buy. Both companies caught flak when prices crashed afterward, with Tesla eventually selling most of its stack and SpaceX choosing to hold on.
The S-1 filing disclosed that as of December 31, the company held 18,712 BTC at an average cost of about $35,000 per coin, which makes SpaceX the seventh-largest known corporate bitcoin holder in the world, ahead of Coinbase.
For context, Tesla still holds more than 11,000 bitcoins, while Strategy Inc., the public company Michael Saylor turned into the biggest corporate bitcoin holder, holds over 843,000. SpaceX is now in that conversation.
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Why This Listing Is A Big Deal For Crypto
Most companies that hold bitcoin are tiny or single-purpose treasury vehicles. SpaceX is different - it posted $18.7 billion in revenue in 2025, mostly from Starlink, and is reportedly chasing a private-market valuation north of $1.5 trillion.
When the IPO prices, expected around June 11 on Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX, it will become the largest public company by market cap with bitcoin on its balance sheet. Bitcoin won't be the story of SpaceX - rockets and satellite internet will - but the disclosure puts crypto in front of every index fund manager and retirement portfolio holding the stock.
There's a paperwork side too. New FASB fair-value accounting rules mean SpaceX has to mark its bitcoin holdings to market every quarter, so big swings will show up directly in earnings.
Musk's Other Space Bet
The bitcoin haul isn't the only headline tucked into SpaceX's run-up to going public. The company is also leaning hard on Starlink and a possible orbital AI data center play with Google, framing itself as critical infrastructure for the next phase of AI rather than just a rocket company.
That's a different sales pitch than crypto-curious investors might expect. It also helps explain why SpaceX can carry a billion-plus bitcoin position without it dominating the story.
This isn't the first major space-tech IPO either - Cerebras's debut in 2024 set the recent template for big private-market darlings hitting public markets.
What To Watch
The IPO itself is expected to be one of the biggest in market history. The bitcoin position is small compared to SpaceX's overall business, but it sets a precedent.
If the largest IPO of 2026 carries a billion-plus in bitcoin without much pushback, it gets easier for the next CEO to do the same.
The mainstreaming of crypto rarely happens on a single day. It happens one S-1 at a time.
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