
SpaceX raises $75bn in public sale, setting up Elon Musk’s record stock-market debut
A $75 billion public raise before a record listing turns SpaceX’s next chapter into a trillionaire test for markets.
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A $75 billion public raise before a record listing turns SpaceX’s next chapter into a trillionaire test for markets.

Elon Musk's rocket company prices its world-scale IPO at $135 per share, moving into public markets immediately.
The ChatGPT maker’s filing joins Anthropic’s AI listing wave and turns “someday” into a real timing option.

A $30 billion implied arrangement reshapes who supplies AI muscle, and how tech boards think about capacity and concentration.

A small modular nuclear startup cleared the self-sustaining line. Regulators and investors now shift to the next proof point.

The filing fixes SpaceX at 555.6 million shares at $135 apiece, while Musk still controls 82.4% of voting power and public buyers get a sliver of the float.

A fixed $135 IPO roadshow price would put SpaceX at $1.75 trillion, a milestone that reshuffles how founders, boards, and public-market investors compare private and listed giants.

The horror hit crossed a massive box office line faster than most arthouse films ever do, reshaping what A24 can do in theaters.

The 2026 Fortune 500 shows record revenues, profits, and market concentration, with Nvidia crossing $4 trillion in value.