SpaceX eyes world's largest IPO in 2026 for a valuation of $1.5 trillion

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SpaceX is said to be moving ahead with plans to launch the world's largest IPO in 2026, raising significantly more than $30 billion at a valuation of about $1.5 trillion, according to people familiar with the matter.

SpaceX’s faster path to IPO is in part fueled by the strength of its Starlink satellite internet service, as well as the development of its Starship Moon and Mars rocket. (Reuters)
SpaceX’s faster path to IPO is in part fueled by the strength of its Starlink satellite internet service, as well as the development of its Starship Moon and Mars rocket. (Reuters)

That would leave the Elon Musk-led company near the market capitalisation that Saudi Aramco established during its record 2019 listing. The oil major had raised $29 billion at the time.

SpaceX’s management and advisers are pursuing a listing as soon as mid-to-late 2026, said some of the people, who declined to be identified because the matter is confidential. The timing of the IPO could change based on market conditions and other factors, and sources said it could slip into 2027.

SpaceX didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The SpaceX IPO plans sent shares in other space companies higher on Tuesday. EchoStar Corp., which has agreed to sell spectrum licences to SpaceX, rose as much as 12% in New York, hitting a fresh intraday record. Space transportation company Rocket Lab Corp. extended gains to as much as 4.3%.

Bloomberg and other media reported on Friday that SpaceX is exploring a possible IPO as soon as late next year. Musk and the company’s board of directors advanced plans for the listing and fundraising—including hiring for key roles and how it would spend the capital—in recent days as SpaceX firmed up its latest insider share sale, one of the people said.

SpaceX’s faster path to IPO is in part fueled by the strength of its fast-growing Starlink satellite internet service, including the promise of a direct-to-mobile business, as well as the development of its Starship Moon and Mars rocket.

The company is expected to produce around $15 billion in revenue in 2025, increasing to between $22 billion and $24 billion in 2026, one of the people said, with the majority of sales coming from Starlink.

SpaceX expects to use some of the funds raised in an IPO to develop space-based data centres, including purchasing the chips required to run them, two of the people said, an idea Musk expressed interest in during a recent event with Baron Capital.

In the current secondary offering, SpaceX has set a per-share price of around $420, putting its valuation above the $800 billion previously reported, people familiar with the discussions said. The company is allowing employees to sell around $2 billion worth of stock and SpaceX will participate in buying back some shares, two of the people said.

The valuation strategy is designed to level-set the company’s fair market valuation in a precursor to the IPO, one of the people added.

“SpaceX has been cash-flow positive for many years and does periodic stock buybacks twice a year to provide liquidity for employees and investors,” Musk said in a post on his social media platform X on 6 December. “Valuation increments are a function of progress with Starship and Starlink and securing global direct-to-cell spectrum that greatly increases our addressable market.”

SpaceX executives have repeatedly floated the idea of spinning off the Starlink business into a separate, publicly traded company—a concept President Gwynne Shotwell first suggested in 2020. However, Musk cast doubt on the timing over the years. In 2024, Chief Financial Officer Bret Johnsen said that a Starlink IPO would be something that would take place more likely “in the years to come”.

The biggest long-term investors in SpaceX are venture firms like Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund, 137 Ventures led by Justin Fishner-Wolfson and Valor Equity Partners. Fidelity also is a significant investor, as is Alphabet Inc.’s Google.

If SpaceX sold 5% of the company at that valuation, it would have to sell $40 billion of stock—making it the biggest IPO of all time, well above Saudi Aramco’s roughly $29 billion listing in 2019. That company sold just 1.5% of ownership in that offering, a much smaller slice than the majority of publicly traded firms make available.

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