SpaceX IPO Watch

SpaceX’s $135 IPO Meets the Balance Sheet

Monday, June 22, 2026 · 8 min

SpaceX IPO Watch cover art

SpaceX IPO reporting points to a $135 share price and $1.75 trillion valuation, while first public financials show heavy losses, debt and AI capex that make the float as much a balance-sheet test as a rocket-company debut.

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SpaceX IPO reporting points to a $135 share price and $1.75 trillion valuation, while first public financials show heavy losses, debt and AI capex that make the float as much a balance-sheet test as a rocket-company debut.

In this episode

  1. SpaceX Plans to Set IPO Price at US$135 Per Share, Targeting US$75 Bil Raise — Reuters | I3investor — I3investor

    # SpaceX plans to set IPO price at $135 per share, targeting record $75 billion raise, source says | Reuters [Skip to main content](https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/spacex-plans-raise-75-billion-ipo-135-per-share-source-says-2026-06-03#main-content) [Exclusive news, data and analytics for financial market professionals Learn more about…

  2. SpaceX’s IPO Filing: Big Spending, Big Losses | Morningstar — Morningstar

    ![Morningstar](/assets/img/morningstar.d826858.svg) # SpaceX’s IPO Filing: Big Spending, Big Losses The first public financials from Elon Musk’s company highlight Starlink’s revenue power and increased spending on AI. ![](/assets/img/placeholder-256px.4998fa2.png) ![The SpaceX logo with a starship spacecraft in the…

  3. Why Musk Raced to Take SpaceX Public in the World’s Biggest IPO — Bloomberg

    # Why Musk Raced to Take SpaceX Public in the World’s Biggest IPO ## Bloomberg Television 3190000 subscribers 138 likes ### Description 10083 views Posted: 13 Jun 2026 Elon Musk and his executives had one overarching message for the army of people working on the SpaceX initial public offering over the past six months: Faster, move faster. As the gigantic space exploration startup barreled…

  4. Step Back — If SpaceX is reportedly pricing shares at $135 and insider sales imply a huge valuation, how real is that number — who actually gets to trade in these deals, and how much does it tell us about what public investors would pay?

    Background sources