SpaceX files for $1.75 trillion IPO after xAI merger — largest in history
SpaceX has confidentially filed for a $1.75 trillion IPO after absorbing xAI, targeting a $50 billion capital raise that would make it the largest public offering ever.
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TL;DR: SpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation — up from $1.25 trillion at the time of its February 2026 xAI merger — with a $50 billion capital raise that would dwarf Saudi Aramco's record $29.4 billion 2019 offering. Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and JPMorgan are lead underwriters for a planned NYSE listing. The combined entity merges space infrastructure, frontier AI, and social media under a single public vehicle for the first time.
SpaceX submitted a confidential S-1 registration statement to the SEC in late February 2026, initiating the formal public offering process for a combined SpaceX-xAI entity. The confidential filing route — available to emerging growth companies and large accelerated filers meeting specific criteria — allows SpaceX to complete SEC review before public disclosure of financials, giving it negotiating leverage on valuation and timing without tipping its hand to competitors.
The headline figures are striking in isolation and extraordinary in historical context. The company is targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation with a $50 billion primary capital raise. At those numbers, the IPO would be the largest in history by a margin of roughly 70%, eclipsing the previous record holder, Saudi Aramco, which raised $29.4 billion at a $1.7 trillion valuation in December 2019.
| Metric | SpaceX IPO (projected) |
|---|---|
| Target valuation | $1.75 trillion |
| Capital raise target | $50 billion |
| Filing type | Confidential S-1 |
| Planned exchange | NYSE |
| Lead underwriters | Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan |
| Pre-IPO valuation (Jan 2026) | $1.25 trillion (at xAI merger) |
| Valuation increase since merger | $500 billion (40%) |
The $50 billion raise is the more consequential number for near-term market dynamics. Capital at that scale does not simply sit in a corporate account. It gets deployed into infrastructure: launch capacity, satellite manufacturing, data center buildout for Grok inference, and the kind of long-duration compute contracts that underpin frontier AI development. The raise is both a liquidity event for existing shareholders and a war chest for a company competing on multiple technology fronts simultaneously.
The NYSE listing target is notable. SpaceX could list on NASDAQ — the traditional home of technology companies. NYSE carries different symbolism: it is where established industrial and financial giants list. Listing there signals SpaceX's self-positioning as infrastructure, not a growth-stage tech startup.
The February 2026 merger between SpaceX and xAI is the structural event that makes this IPO possible and explains the $500 billion valuation increase.
Elon Musk announced in early February that xAI would be absorbed into SpaceX's corporate structure, creating a combined entity with three distinct revenue-generating divisions: SpaceX's launch and satellite business, Starlink's broadband subscriber base, and xAI's Grok AI platform. The deal was structured as a stock swap — xAI shareholders received SpaceX equity at conversion ratios reflecting xAI's January 2026 $20 billion Series E valuation.
The logic of the merger is straightforward from a capital markets perspective. Separately, xAI is a private AI company with a single product and heavy infrastructure spending. SpaceX is a private aerospace and broadband company with real cash flows. Together, they form a conglomerate with a story that spans AI infrastructure, satellite broadband, and heavy lift launch — three of the highest-conviction long-term investment themes of 2026. Combined, the narrative is compelling enough to support a valuation that neither entity could justify independently.
SpaceX had resisted public market pressure for years. Musk repeatedly stated he had no interest in taking SpaceX public while Starship development was ongoing, arguing that quarterly earnings cycles are incompatible with long-timeline aerospace development. The reversal in early 2026 is not coincidental. Three conditions have converged:
The $1.25 trillion valuation at the time of the merger reflected a straightforward sum-of-parts: SpaceX's established private market valuation of approximately $350 billion plus xAI's implied valuation from its Series E. The jump to $1.75 trillion in the weeks since reflects the market's assessment that the combined entity is worth more than the sum of its parts — the AI infrastructure angle in particular commands a multiple that neither division earns in isolation.
Any analysis of the SpaceX IPO that focuses primarily on the AI narrative is missing the more important financial story: Starlink is what makes this company listable.
Starlink crossed 9.2 million subscribers in Q4 2025, generating annualized revenue in excess of $10 billion. The consumer broadband tier generates roughly $120 per subscriber per month at the residential tier, with enterprise and maritime tiers commanding meaningfully higher rates. At 9.2 million subscribers and a blended average revenue per user above $90 per month, Starlink's run-rate revenue exceeds $10 billion annually — making it one of the largest broadband providers in the world measured by revenue, operating entirely via satellite.
| Starlink Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Subscribers (Q4 2025) | 9.2 million |
| Annual revenue | >$10 billion |
| Satellite constellation | ~7,000 active Starlink satellites |
| Coverage | Available in 100+ countries |
| Latency (median) | 20–40ms (low Earth orbit) |
| Primary competitors | HughesNet, Viasat, rural terrestrial ISPs |
The subscriber growth trajectory is also critical to the IPO valuation. Starlink added roughly 3 million subscribers in 2025 alone. At that rate, a 15–20 million subscriber base by 2028 is plausible, which would put Starlink in the revenue range of mid-tier US cable operators. Unlike terrestrial cable, Starlink's marginal cost per additional subscriber is low — the satellite constellation is deployed; adding a subscriber primarily requires shipping a dish, not laying cable.
The IPO timing also benefits from Starship's maturity. Starship is the vehicle that makes Starlink's next phase — higher-bandwidth Gen2 satellites — economical to deploy. A single Starship launch carries roughly 60 next-generation Starlink satellites, compared to 22 per Falcon 9. The per-satellite launch cost advantage compounds over thousands of satellites. Starship's commercial availability validates a cost structure that is difficult for any competitor to replicate over a 5–10 year horizon.
xAI closed a $20 billion Series E in January 2026 at a pre-money valuation of approximately $75 billion — making it one of the largest private funding rounds in AI history, behind only the rounds that have capitalized OpenAI and Anthropic at comparable stages.
The round was led by a consortium of sovereign wealth funds and strategic investors, with Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, and Kingdom Holding Company among the disclosed participants. The capital was designated primarily for infrastructure: xAI's Memphis, Tennessee data center (the "Colossus" facility) and a planned second facility on the West Coast, both of which run the GPU clusters that power Grok inference and xAI's enterprise API business.
Grok, xAI's flagship language model, is the AI-layer asset that public market investors are pricing into the $1.75 trillion valuation. As of early 2026, Grok is available through X (formerly Twitter) for Premium subscribers and via an enterprise API for developer customers. The integration with X gives Grok a real-time data advantage that competitors lack — the model can access and cite current information directly from the X firehose, a capability that neither OpenAI nor Anthropic replicates at equivalent depth.
xAI's revenue at the time of the SpaceX merger was not publicly disclosed, but analyst estimates based on X Premium subscriber counts and enterprise API pricing placed it in the $1–3 billion annual run-rate range — modest relative to the $75 billion valuation, but consistent with the multiples the market is assigning to frontier AI infrastructure plays in early 2026.
The scale of the proposed SpaceX IPO is easier to understand through comparison.
| IPO | Year | Valuation | Capital Raised |
|---|---|---|---|
| SpaceX (projected) | 2026 | $1.75 trillion | $50 billion |
| Saudi Aramco | 2019 | $1.7 trillion | $29.4 billion |
| Alibaba | 2014 | $168 billion | $25 billion |
| SoftBank | 2018 | $100 billion | $23.5 billion |
| NTT Mobile | 1998 | $18 billion | $18.4 billion |
| Rivian | 2021 | $86 billion | $13.7 billion |
Saudi Aramco's 2019 IPO was notable precisely because it was the first company in history to list at a valuation above $1 trillion on its first trading day. SpaceX would not only clear that bar — it would exceed Aramco's capital raise by $20 billion and its listing valuation by $50 billion, despite being a technology company rather than the world's most profitable oil producer.
The comparison to Aramco is also instructive structurally. Aramco listed only a small percentage of its total shares — roughly 1.5% — generating $29.4 billion while maintaining near-total Saudi government control. SpaceX is targeting a larger float ($50 billion against a $1.75 trillion valuation implies a roughly 2.9% float), but the control structure is expected to mirror Aramco's: Musk retains super-voting shares that prevent any dilution of operational control regardless of public market ownership.
The SpaceX-xAI IPO is the culmination of a consolidation strategy that Elon Musk has been executing across three years. The combined public company — if it lists as structured — will hold equity stakes or operational control over:
This is not a conglomerate in the traditional sense. Each division reinforces the others in ways that are specific to the AI infrastructure era. Starlink provides the connectivity layer for remote inference. X provides the real-time training data that gives Grok its differentiation. SpaceX's manufacturing scale provides the cost structure that makes Starlink sustainable. The AI inference business running on GPU clusters in Memphis creates a revenue stream that grows with AI adoption.
The structure that makes this company strategically coherent is also what makes it difficult to value. Traditional comparable analysis fails because there is no other public company combining satellite broadband, heavy-lift launch, frontier AI, and social media. The closest precedents are conglomerates like Alphabet — which spans search, cloud, autonomous vehicles, and quantum computing — but Alphabet's divisions are each independently large enough to be standalone S&P 500 companies. SpaceX's divisions are at different stages of maturity, and the xAI component is still pre-scale by the standards of AI infrastructure investment.
The $1.75 trillion valuation requires investors to believe the sum-of-parts story — that the combination is worth more than each piece separately, and that the AI infrastructure multiple is the right lens for pricing the entire entity. That is a defensible argument in a market that valued NVIDIA at over $3 trillion on the strength of a single hardware category. It is also a bet that requires a sustained conviction through the volatility of a public listing.
The selection of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and JPMorgan as lead underwriters is not surprising, but it is confirming. These three banks collectively manage the majority of large-cap technology IPOs and have the institutional distribution networks necessary to place $50 billion in new equity without destabilizing the price.
Each brings specific strengths. Goldman's technology equity team has been the lead underwriter on more large-cap tech listings than any other bank over the past decade. Morgan Stanley has the sovereign wealth fund relationships that will be critical for placing the large block orders that anchor a $50 billion book. JPMorgan brings the broadest institutional coverage network among the three, particularly in Asia-Pacific, where sovereign funds and insurance companies are likely to be significant buyers.
The choice of NYSE over NASDAQ is consistent with the underwriter selection. Both Goldman and JPMorgan have stronger NYSE relationships than NASDAQ relationships for large-cap industrial technology listings. The NYSE's specialist market structure also provides different liquidity dynamics for a stock at this capitalization level — better suited to the kind of institutional block trading that a $1.75 trillion company will see in its first months of public trading.
The $50 billion raise against a $1.75 trillion valuation implies a roughly 2.9% public float at listing — an unusually small float for a company at this scale. Saudi Aramco's 1.5% float created significant volatility in its first weeks of trading as the float was too thin to absorb large institutional orders. SpaceX's float, while larger, is still likely to produce meaningful price volatility in early trading. The underwriters will need to manage the lock-up expirations carefully — likely staggered releases of insider shares over 12–18 months — to avoid a wall of selling that could compress the post-IPO price.
The SpaceX-xAI IPO is not just a liquidity event for early investors. It will reshape how capital flows into AI infrastructure broadly.
At $1.75 trillion, SpaceX becomes one of the five largest companies in the world by market capitalization on its first trading day — behind only Apple, NVIDIA, Microsoft, and potentially Alphabet, depending on market conditions in mid-2026. Its entry into the public market at that scale forces index inclusion. The S&P 500 and Russell 1000 inclusion events alone will drive tens of billions in forced buying from passive index funds.
That forced buying creates a reference valuation for AI infrastructure assets that affects how private markets price comparable companies. If SpaceX's AI division — xAI — is implicitly valued at $400–600 billion within the combined entity (a reasonable estimate based on the valuation uplift from the merger), that sets a benchmark against which Anthropic, OpenAI's current private valuation, and Mistral are all measured. The SpaceX IPO is a price discovery event for an entire asset class.
xAI's Memphis data center — the Colossus facility — represents one of the largest single-site AI compute deployments in the world, with reported capacity of over 100,000 H100-equivalent GPUs. The combined entity's $50 billion raise will accelerate expansion of that infrastructure. For the AI chip market, this matters: a publicly traded xAI with a deep capital base is a credible anchor customer for next-generation inference chips — including the NVIDIA-Groq LPU discussed in earlier reporting — at a scale that changes chip supplier dynamics.
The IPO filing does not eliminate the significant risks that attach to a company at this scale in this regulatory environment.
Antitrust exposure is the most immediate concern. The combination of launch services, satellite broadband, AI, and social media under a single Musk-controlled entity has already attracted attention from competition regulators in the EU and UK. The European Commission has signaled interest in whether Starlink's market position in satellite broadband — it holds over 70% global market share in low-Earth-orbit broadband by subscriber count — constitutes a dominant position subject to Article 102 TFEU. An IPO does not resolve this scrutiny; in some ways it intensifies it by raising the public profile of the combined entity.
Conflict of interest with DOGE and government contracts is a second structural risk. SpaceX holds billions in government launch contracts from NASA and the Department of Defense. Musk's concurrent role leading DOGE — the government efficiency initiative — creates appearances of conflict that public shareholders and government oversight bodies have begun to probe. The S-1 will need to address these relationships with significant disclosure, and any adverse regulatory action on government contracts during the IPO process could affect the valuation materially.
Valuation concentration risk is the third factor. If the $1.75 trillion valuation assumes a frontier AI multiple for the entire entity, a repricing of AI valuations broadly — driven by a new open-source model release, a major inference cost reduction, or a regulatory event — could compress the stock significantly without any fundamental change in SpaceX's core launch and broadband business.
For the roughly 10,000 SpaceX employees and the thousands of private market investors holding SpaceX equity accumulated over the past 24 years, the IPO represents the primary liquidity event they have been awaiting.
SpaceX has conducted periodic tender offers allowing employees and early investors to sell a portion of their holdings at prevailing private market valuations. Those tender offers have provided partial liquidity but not the kind of open-market access that a full public listing creates. The IPO converts private equity into freely tradable stock — subject to lock-up periods, typically 180 days for insiders — and creates a continuous price discovery mechanism.
| Shareholder Class | Approximate Holdings | Liquidity Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Elon Musk | ~40–45% (pre-dilution) | Lock-up subject to super-voting retention |
| Institutional pre-IPO investors | ~30% | 180-day lock-up post-listing |
| Employee equity (RSUs, options) | ~10–15% | Staggered vesting post-lock-up |
| xAI Series E investors | ~8–10% (post-merger) | 180-day lock-up post-listing |
| Public float (IPO) | ~2.9% | Freely tradable at listing |
For xAI's Series E investors, the stock swap structure of the merger means their xAI equity has been converted to SpaceX equity at the merger exchange ratio. The IPO is therefore their liquidity event as well — though the 180-day lock-up means no Series E investor can sell on day one of trading.
The concentration of control is worth noting explicitly. Musk's super-voting share structure — similar to what Mark Zuckerberg uses at Meta — means public shareholders are buying economic exposure to the company's performance, not voting control over its direction. SpaceX's public shareholders will have no meaningful ability to influence capital allocation, strategic direction, or executive compensation. That is not unusual for a founder-controlled technology IPO, but it is a material fact for institutional investors who typically require governance rights commensurate with ownership.
No listing date has been publicly confirmed. The confidential S-1 filing initiates SEC review, which typically takes 2–4 months for companies of this complexity. A public filing would follow SEC comment resolution, after which the company must wait at least 15 days before listing. A Q3 or Q4 2026 listing is the most plausible window based on typical timelines, though SpaceX can withdraw or delay if market conditions deteriorate.
SpaceX has not announced a ticker symbol. Industry observers expect something straightforward — SPCE is taken by Virgin Galactic (now Virgin Orbit), so alternatives like SPX or SPCX on the NYSE are more likely. The ticker will be disclosed in the public S-1 filing.
Standard practice for IPOs of this size is to allocate the majority of shares to institutional investors during the bookbuild process. Retail access is typically limited to brokerage platforms with IPO allocation programs (Fidelity, Schwab, TD Ameritrade). Given the 2.9% float, retail allocation will be extremely limited. Most retail investors who want exposure will need to buy in the secondary market after listing.
Existing contracts are not affected by the IPO. However, the public disclosure requirements that come with being a listed company will create more transparency around contract terms, pricing, and performance — information that SpaceX has historically kept private as a closely held company. The conflict-of-interest disclosures around Musk's government roles will be a focus of both the S-1 and ongoing proxy and disclosure requirements.
The IPO injects $50 billion in fresh capital into the combined entity. A meaningful portion of that capital will fund AI infrastructure — data center expansion, chip procurement, and model development. That gives xAI a war chest comparable to what OpenAI has raised cumulatively. Whether that capital translates to a better model depends on research execution, not just compute spending. The capital advantage is real; the outcome is not predetermined.
Conglomerate structures historically face pressure to separate divisions if the combined valuation persistently trades below the sum of parts. If the AI multiple that justifies the $1.75 trillion valuation compresses while the launch and broadband business remains strong, activist shareholders or the market itself may push for separation of xAI as a distinct public entity. Musk's voting control makes forced separation extremely unlikely, but the option to voluntarily spin out xAI at a later date — potentially after the AI business reaches standalone public market readiness — is a plausible strategic move.
NYSE is the traditional listing venue for large-cap industrial companies, infrastructure businesses, and financial institutions. SpaceX's positioning of itself as infrastructure — satellite broadband, launch services, AI compute — is better aligned with NYSE's identity than NASDAQ's technology startup heritage. The underwriter relationships also favor NYSE. Both Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have deeper NYSE specialist relationships for listings at this capitalization level.
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