
SpaceX sets IPO at $135, selling 555M+ shares and launching trading Friday
Elon Musk's rocket company prices its world-scale IPO at $135 per share, moving into public markets immediately.
46 briefings · “SpaceX”

Elon Musk's rocket company prices its world-scale IPO at $135 per share, moving into public markets immediately.

SpaceX moves from rumor to price point: $135 per share signals a new bar for private-market exits and public-market gravity.

Trading starts June 12 at $135, but analysts are split over a $72-per-share “option premium” on orbital AI dreams.

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

A massive Google-SpaceX compute deal lands just a week before SpaceX’s IPO, signaling demand and leverage shifts in space infrastructure.
SpaceX wants to raise up to $75bn at $135 a share, but critics say the fixed-price deal may leave buyers overpaying before book building even starts.

Elon Musk’s company is moving faster toward a market debut that could reset expectations for private space valuations and investor demand.

The Elon Musk company set a target price for buyers earlier than expected, putting a giant private valuation in the market’s spotlight.

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.