SpaceX Announces Historic $75B IPO
SpaceX, led by Elon Musk, announced plans for what Reuters calls the largest IPO in history: shares priced at $135, trading to start June 12. The offering targets $75B and values the company at $1.7T, per the report. SpaceX reported 2025 revenue of $18.7B (+33%) and a $4.9B net loss, with $60.5B debt and legal costs above $500M, according to the IPO filing.
Background
SpaceX (private) announced a $75B IPO with $135/share pricing and a June 12 trading start; filing details include debt and litigation costs.
Why it matters
This is primarily a capital-markets event for a private company; without a US-listed ticker in the article, there is no direct single-name trading trigger for public equities.
Market relevance
Valuation and funding terms may influence sentiment and expectations across space/launch and satellite internet ecosystems, but the article provides no direct public-equity instrument to trade.
Market effects
Highlights capital-market appetite for space/launch and satellite internet, but does not directly reprice any US-listed equity in the article.
US-focused IPO narrative may boost sentiment toward US space/defense supply chains generally.
Sets a benchmark valuation for private space assets and could influence global funding expectations for launch and satellite networks.
Alternative perspectives
The disclosed $60.5B debt and litigation/legal-cost overhang could make the headline valuation less investable than it appears.
Because SpaceX is private, the tradable impact is indirect; the key market signal is valuation/financing terms rather than immediate equity repricing.
Key entities
- private companySpaceX
Announced a $75B IPO at $135/share, valuing the company at $1.7T; filing cites $60.5B debt and >$500M expected legal costs.




