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SpaceX IPO: Investor Q&A on the world’s most talked-about listing

Equities
Charu Chanana
Charu Chanana

Chief Investment Strategist

Key points:

  • SpaceX had a successful IPO, but the bigger question is what investors are really buying. SpaceX’s strong debut shows huge demand, but investors are not just buying rockets. They are buying launch services, Starlink, defence infrastructure, Starship, direct-to-cell connectivity and long-term AI/space optionality.
  • The valuation is high because markets are pricing SpaceX as a platform, not a traditional aerospace company. At around US$1.77tn at IPO and above US$2tn after listing, investors are paying for future dominance in space infrastructure. That may be justified if Starlink scales and launch costs keep falling, but it also means a lot of success is already priced in.
  • SpaceX could make the space economy a mainstream investment theme. The IPO gives public markets a mega-cap anchor for space, with potential spillovers into aerospace, defence, satellites, telecom infrastructure, geospatial data and ETFs. But the key discipline remains the same: the theme can be powerful, but entry price still matters.

SpaceX is not a simple IPO story.

Yes, the headline is massive: the largest public market debut in history, a valuation that immediately placed it among the world’s most valuable companies, and retail excitement that few listings have ever generated.

But for investors, the real questions go beyond the first-day pop.

Let’s break it down.

 

1. How did SpaceX list, and how did the stock perform?

SpaceX listed on Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX in what became the largest IPO on record.

The company priced its IPO at US$135 per share, raised about US$75 billion, and was valued at roughly US$1.77 trillion at the IPO price.

The stock opened above the issue price and closed its first trading day at US$160.95, up about 19%. That pushed SpaceX’s market value above US$2 trillion almost immediately.

 

2. What does SpaceX actually do?

SpaceX is not just a rocket company.

It has several business lines:

  • Launch services: SpaceX launches satellites, cargo and crew into orbit using reusable rockets. Falcon 9 is the workhorse rocket, Falcon Heavy is used for heavier missions, and Dragon carries cargo and astronauts to the International Space Station.
  • Starlink: This is the satellite internet business. It provides broadband connectivity to consumers, enterprises, aircraft, ships, remote regions and governments.
  • Defence and government infrastructure: Through services such as Starshield, SpaceX is increasingly tied to secure communications, surveillance, battlefield connectivity and sovereign space infrastructure.
  • Starship: This is the next-generation rocket system designed for much larger payloads, lunar missions, Mars ambitions and potentially future space infrastructure.
  • Future optionality: This includes direct-to-cell connectivity, orbital infrastructure, space-based data, AI-linked infrastructure and the longer-term dream of making space a commercial platform.

The scale is already significant.

In 2025, SpaceX completed around 165 orbital launches, setting another annual launch record. The reusable Falcon 9 rocket powered most of that cadence. The company also conducted five Starship test flights, showing how central Starship is to the next stage of the story.

That is why SpaceX is being valued as more than a launch company. It is being valued as a space infrastructure platform.

 

3. What are investors really buying?

Investors are buying three layers of SpaceX.

  • Today’s business: Launch services, Starlink subscriptions, government contracts and defence-related revenue.
  • Tomorrow’s platform: A global satellite communications network, cheaper access to orbit, direct-to-cell connectivity and a growing role in defence and enterprise connectivity.
  • The distant dream: Mars, space manufacturing, orbital infrastructure, AI-linked space data and the possibility that space becomes a major commercial layer of the global economy.

That third layer is important. It is also where the risk sits.

SpaceX is a real company with real revenue. But part of the valuation is clearly attached to businesses that are still being built.

 

4. What is the main revenue driver?

The key revenue driver is Starlink.

SpaceX generated about US$18.7 billion in revenue in 2025, up roughly 33% from the previous year. Starlink accounted for about 60% of that revenue, making it the company’s main economic engine.

Starlink has over 10 million users and roughly 9,600 satellites in orbit. It is estimated that Starlink’s 2025 revenue was around US$11.4 billion.

That matters because Starlink turns SpaceX from a project-based launch company into a recurring-revenue infrastructure business.

Markets generally pay higher multiples for recurring revenue, network effects and scalable platforms than for one-off hardware or contract work. If Starlink keeps growing, investors may value SpaceX more like a global connectivity platform than a traditional aerospace contractor.

Launch is still critical because it gives SpaceX cost control and strategic advantage. But Starlink is likely the business investors will watch most closely for revenue growth, margins and cash flow.

 

5. Is SpaceX profitable? What about margins?

This is where investors need to look under the hood.

SpaceX made a profit of about US$791 million in 2024, helped by the growth of Starlink and the reusable rocket launch business. But in 2025, the company swung to a net loss of about US$4.9 billion.

The issue is not that every part of SpaceX is broken. It is that the profitable parts are being offset by heavy spending elsewhere.

The business mix looks something like this:

  • Starlink: The strongest recurring-revenue engine and likely the most important profit driver.
  • Launch services: Strategic and increasingly scaled, helped by reusable rockets and high launch cadence.
  • Starship: Long-term strategic value, but capital intensive today.
  • AI and xAI-related spending: Potentially exciting, but currently a major drag.
  • Defence and government contracts: Potentially more resilient revenue, but tied to political, procurement and security risks.

The AI segment is reportedly the biggest drag. It generated about US$3.2 billion of revenue in 2025, but posted an operating loss of around US$6.4 billion.

That is the trade-off investors are buying: a company with strong revenue growth and powerful platforms, but also very high investment needs.

 

6. How much cash is SpaceX burning?

SpaceX is still a capital-hungry business.

The company reportedly had an accumulated deficit of about US$41.3 billion as of the end of March 2026. It also posted a net loss of around US$4.3 billion in the first quarter of 2026 alone.

Starship and Super Heavy development had already required more than US$15 billion of capex through 2025, with around US$3 billion of Starship-related development costs in 2025.

That is the reality behind the dream.

SpaceX has real revenue, real scale and real strategic importance. But it is also trying to fund multiple expensive projects at the same time:

  • Starlink expansion
  • Starship and Super Heavy
  • Direct-to-cell connectivity
  • AI infrastructure
  • Defence and government infrastructure
  • Longer-term space ambitions

For investors, the question is not whether SpaceX is exciting. It is whether the cash-generating businesses can keep up with the cash-burning ambitions.

 

7. Why is the valuation so high?

SpaceX IPOed at roughly US$1.77 trillion and quickly traded above US$2 trillion in market value. That is a huge valuation for a company that generated about US$18.7 billion in 2025 revenue and a net loss.

At the IPO price, SpaceX was reportedly trading at a trailing price-to-sales multiple of roughly 94x. That is above many mega-cap technology companies and closer to high-growth space peers.

There are five reasons the market is willing to pay so much:

  • Scarcity: There are very few listed ways to invest directly in the space economy at this scale.
  • Market leadership: SpaceX has changed the economics of getting to orbit through reusable rockets and high launch frequency.
  • Starlink: If Starlink becomes a global connectivity layer, investors may value it less like a satellite business and more like telecom, data infrastructure or platform software.
  • Defence: Space is increasingly becoming strategic infrastructure for governments.
  • The Musk factor: Musk companies are different. Investors do not only pay for today’s product. They pay for tomorrow’s platform and the distant dream after that.

Tesla was never valued only as a car company. It was valued as an EV, battery, software, autonomy, robotics and energy platform.

SpaceX may be getting the same treatment.

The risk is that a lot of future success is already embedded in the price.

 

8. Is the valuation justified?

It depends how investors frame the company.

If SpaceX is valued only on current revenue and earnings, the valuation looks stretched. A company with US$18.7 billion of revenue, a US$4.9 billion net loss and a valuation above US$1.7 trillion is not cheap by conventional metrics.

If it is valued as a monopoly-like space infrastructure platform with launch, broadband, defence, direct-to-cell, AI infrastructure and long-term orbital optionality, the valuation becomes easier to understand — but still demanding.

That distinction matters.

A high valuation is not automatically wrong. But it does raise the bar. SpaceX will need to prove that it can turn launch leadership, Starlink growth and space infrastructure into durable cash flows.

The market may be willing to pay for the dream. But over time, it will still ask for numbers.

 

9. Why do people call this the “AWS moment” for space?

AWS changed the internet economy because it made computing cheaper, scalable and available on demand.

SpaceX may be doing something similar for space.

Lower launch costs can unlock new business models:

  • More satellites
  • Better global broadband
  • Defence surveillance
  • Climate monitoring
  • Earth observation
  • Space manufacturing
  • Autonomous systems
  • Data services
  • Communications infrastructure

That is why SpaceX’s impact may be bigger than SpaceX itself.

If access to orbit becomes cheaper, faster and more routine, space can move from a government-led science project to a commercial infrastructure layer.

That is the real investment story.

 

10. What does the SpaceX IPO mean for investors?

The SpaceX IPO opens up the space economy as a mainstream investable theme.

The global space economy was estimated at about US$630 billion in 2023 and is projected to reach about US$1.8 trillion by 2035. That means investors are not only looking at rockets. They are looking at communications, navigation, Earth observation, defence, data and downstream services that depend on space infrastructure.

Until now, space investing was either too private, too speculative or too niche for many investors. SpaceX changes that. It gives public markets a mega-cap anchor for the theme.

But investors do not need to think about the opportunity only through SpaceX.

The broader space economy can be simplified into three investable buckets:

  • Infrastructure: Launch, satellites, communications networks and ground systems.
  • Defence and security: Surveillance, secure communications, missile tracking, cyber and sovereign space infrastructure.
  • Data and services: Earth observation, mapping, weather, logistics, connectivity and AI-linked data applications.

In other words, SpaceX may be the company that gets investors excited. But the investable opportunity may extend across the ecosystem.

The key is to separate the theme from the stock price.

Space may be a powerful long-term theme. That does not mean every space-related stock will win, or that any valuation can be justified.

 

11. What are the simpler ways to think about space economy exposure?

Investors do not need a long shopping list. A simpler framework is more useful.

There are three ways to think about exposure.

  • Direct exposure: SpaceX itself, for investors comfortable with valuation risk, IPO volatility and company-specific execution risk.
  • Ecosystem exposure: Companies linked to aerospace, defence, satellites, telecom infrastructure, semiconductors, sensors, cybersecurity and geospatial data.
  • Diversified exposure: Space, aerospace and defence ETFs, which can reduce single-stock risk but may also include companies with very different business models.

Saxo’s Space Economy shortlist offers access to the space economy through ETFs and listed companies across launch systems, satellite communications, data and analytics, and defense suppliers.

12. What does SpaceX mean for passive investors?

This is one of the most important questions.

SpaceX is now so large that many investors may end up owning it even if they never buy the stock directly.

That happens through index inclusion.

Nasdaq has introduced a fast-entry route that could allow SpaceX to enter the Nasdaq-100 as soon as 15 trading days after its IPO. FTSE Russell has also changed its rules so very large IPOs can enter Russell US indexes after just five trading days, if they meet the required public-float value threshold. S&P Dow Jones, however, has not created the same fast-track route for the S&P 500, so SpaceX may not enter that benchmark immediately.

For passive investors, this matters.

If SpaceX enters the Nasdaq-100 or FTSE Russell-linked indexes, ETFs and index funds tracking those benchmarks may need to buy the stock mechanically. That can create forced demand.

There is also a risk. If index funds are forced to buy after a big first-day move, passive investors may end up owning SpaceX at a much higher valuation than IPO investors. So index inclusion can create demand, but it does not remove valuation risk.

 

13. Could we see Magnificent 7 selling to buy SpaceX?

Yes, that is possible.

There are two channels.

  • Active investors may need to create room. If a large new mega-cap enters the market, portfolio managers who want exposure may fund it by trimming existing winners. The easiest source of cash is often the most liquid and most profitable positions — which means the Magnificent 7.
  • Retail investors may also rotate. If they want SpaceX but do not have fresh cash, they may sell what they already own. That could mean AI winners, large-cap tech or Tesla.

This does not mean the Magnificent 7 story is broken. But it can create near-term pressure if SpaceX becomes a major liquidity event.

The market does not create new money out of nowhere. Sometimes, to buy the new dream, investors sell part of the old dream.

 

14. Could SpaceX become a risk to the AI trade?

Indirectly, yes.

The AI trade has already become crowded. If investors need liquidity for SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic or other mega-IPOs, some money may come out of existing AI winners.

There is also narrative overlap. SpaceX is not only a space story. It is increasingly being discussed as a future AI infrastructure story, especially after the xAI transaction and the discussion around orbital compute.

But this is also one of the riskiest parts of the story.

The current financials suggest that AI is still a drag, not a profit engine. The AI segment reportedly lost more than US$6 billion in 2025. So investors need to separate the proven businesses — launch and Starlink — from the long-term AI pitch.

The risk for markets is not that AI disappears. It is that investors suddenly have more mega-cap dreams to fund.

 

15. What should investors watch next?

Investors should watch six things:

  • Starlink growth: Subscriber numbers, enterprise adoption, aviation, maritime, government demand and direct-to-cell partnerships.
  • ARPU: Starlink’s average revenue per user has reportedly fallen as it expands into lower-income geographies and uses more aggressive pricing. That supports subscriber growth, but it also raises margin questions.
  • Margins and cash flow: Revenue growth is important, but investors will want to see whether SpaceX can turn scale into sustainable profitability.
  • Capex: SpaceX’s ambitions are enormous, but they are not cheap. Investors need to watch how much cash is being consumed by Starship, satellites, AI infrastructure and long-term projects.
  • Index inclusion: The timing of inclusion into major benchmarks could create another wave of demand, especially from passive funds.
  • Retail behaviour: If the stock becomes a FOMO trade, volatility may rise. A great company can still be a difficult stock if too much optimism is priced in too quickly.

 

16. What are the biggest risks?

The biggest risks are:

  • Valuation risk: The stock may already price in many years of success.
  • IPO mechanics: If retail demand is very high and allocation is limited, some investors may end up buying after the first-day excitement at a much higher price.
  • Governance risk: Musk companies often come with visionary leadership, but also key-person risk, political risk, communication risk and capital allocation questions.
  • Execution risk: SpaceX has several powerful businesses, but the most exciting parts of the valuation depend on future markets that are not fully proven yet.
  • Capital intensity: Space is expensive. Even market leaders need to keep investing heavily.
  • AI dilution: The AI story may support the valuation narrative, but today it is also a major source of losses.
  • Theme confusion: SpaceX is a real company with real revenue, but not every space-related stock will be a winner. A strong theme can still produce weak investments if the entry price is wrong.

 

17. What is the balanced investor view?

SpaceX may be one of the most important IPOs ever because it could change how investors think about space.

It is not just about rockets. It is about cheaper access to orbit, global connectivity, defence infrastructure, space data, AI infrastructure and a new commercial layer above Earth.

But the excitement should not erase discipline.

The right question is not simply: “Is SpaceX an exciting company?”

It clearly is.

The better question is: “How much of that future is already priced in?”

For investors, the opportunity may come in three forms:

  • Direct exposure to SpaceX for those comfortable with valuation and volatility.
  • Broader exposure through space, aerospace, defence, telecom, cyber and data infrastructure.
  • Indirect exposure through ETFs, where index rules may determine whether investors own SpaceX sooner or later.

SpaceX may be the company that puts the space economy on every investor’s map.

But as always, the theme can be powerful and the entry point can still matter.


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