SpaceX Announces Historic $75B IPO
SpaceX, led by Elon Musk, announced plans for what it says will be the largest IPO in history, with shares priced at $135 and trading starting June 12, according to the article. The offering values the company at $1.7 trillion and aims to raise $75 billion. Reuters says the IPO will broaden access for everyday investors. SpaceX reported 2025 revenue of $18.7B (+33%) and a $4.9B net loss, with $60.5B debt and legal costs above $500M, per the filing.
Background
SpaceX (private) announced a record-setting IPO plan, including $135 share pricing and a June 12 trading start, alongside financial/debt and legal-cost disclosures from the filing.
Why it matters
For traders, the main actionable element is the calendar (June 12) and the potential sentiment read-through to public space and satellite-related equities; the article does not provide a tradable ticker for SpaceX itself.
Market relevance
Record IPO size and valuation can move space/satellite sentiment and positioning ahead of June 12, but there is no direct US-listed issuer to trade from this article alone.
Market effects
Space/launch and satellite internet funding narrative may strengthen; reusable rockets and Starlink-like revenue models get a high-profile capital-market validation.
US capital markets focus on space/defense and satellite-adjacent equities; potential rotation into listed space supply-chain names around the IPO date.
Large valuation and $75B raise could accelerate global competition for launch capacity and satellite broadband investment.
Alternative perspectives
The disclosed $60.5B debt and large expected legal costs could temper enthusiasm and highlight execution/financing risk behind the valuation.
Because SpaceX is private, the tradable impact is indirect—watch for spillover into listed peers’ funding costs, contract wins, and sentiment rather than any direct single-stock repricing.
Key entities
- companySpaceX
Private aerospace and satellite internet company announcing a $75B IPO at $135/share; valued at $1.7T; filing cites $60.5B debt and >$0.5B expected legal costs.
- companyxAI
Musk’s AI firm referenced as a source of lawsuits tied to SpaceX’s expected legal costs; mentioned as recently acquired by SpaceX.


