SpaceX to Debut on Nasdaq in Record $75 Billion IPO
Valuation to Reach Nearly $1.8 Trillion, Surpassing Tesla and Meta
Quick Look
SpaceX to list on Nasdaq with $75B IPO, valuing the company at nearly $1.8T, surpassing Tesla and Meta, with potential to make Elon Musk a trillionaire.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
SpaceX, founded in 2002, aims to reduce space transportation costs and enable human settlement on Mars.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Thursday confirmed it will begin trading on the Nasdaq exchange Friday in the biggest initial public offering in history, a blockbuster market debut that could propel the entrepreneur to trillionaire status. In a filing with the US markets regulator, the company priced more than 555 million shares at US$135 each, placing SpaceX in the top 10 of Wall Street’s biggest companies with a valuation of just under US$1.8 trillion. It will be valued more than Musk’s own Tesla car company, Facebook-owner Meta and Walmart. The offering will raise a record US$75 billion, easily outranking Saudi Aramco’s US$29.4 billion debut in 2019, until now the biggest ever. Underwriters hold an option to buy nearly 83 million additional shares, which would push the total above US$86 billion if exercised in full. The space and rocket company, co-founded by Musk in 2002, will trade under the ticker symbol “SPCX”, with a parallel listing on Nasdaq Texas. All eyes will be on how Wall Street absorbs the offering, which could send tremors across global markets.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
SpaceX stock to see high volatility in the first week of trading
Likely · Within days
Open Questions
- Post-IPO strategic plans
- Impact on space industry competition




