Breaking
CN首爾地鐵1號線停電誤點 通勤族擠爆車站ESMuere una niña de seis años ahogada en una piscina en Balaguer (Lleida)CN印度與印尼簽署國防協議,將出售「布拉莫斯」飛彈KR강동구, 재건축·재개발 신속 추진 위한 TF 회의 개최KR일본 물류 업계, 바이오디젤 트럭 도입 확대…탈탄소 노력 가속화CN張益贍呼籲修法並指藍白政客勿將食安責任全推中央CN“阳光青年发展行动”云南分团活动在昆明开营,中韩青年聚焦绿色低碳议题KR에어프레미아, 미국 사우스웨스트항공과 인터라인 협약 체결CN中科攜手台積等大廠 榮獲全國首張非傳統林業國際森林驗證證書CN歐洲國家砸500億美元研發長程精確打擊武器CN首爾地鐵1號線停電誤點 通勤族擠爆車站ESMuere una niña de seis años ahogada en una piscina en Balaguer (Lleida)CN印度與印尼簽署國防協議,將出售「布拉莫斯」飛彈KR강동구, 재건축·재개발 신속 추진 위한 TF 회의 개최KR일본 물류 업계, 바이오디젤 트럭 도입 확대…탈탄소 노력 가속화CN張益贍呼籲修法並指藍白政客勿將食安責任全推中央CN“阳光青年发展行动”云南分团活动在昆明开营,中韩青年聚焦绿色低碳议题KR에어프레미아, 미국 사우스웨스트항공과 인터라인 협약 체결CN中科攜手台積等大廠 榮獲全國首張非傳統林業國際森林驗證證書CN歐洲國家砸500億美元研發長程精確打擊武器
Newsgather
BackSpaceX IPO: Investors Excited Despite Skepticism Over Ambitious AI Plans
SpaceX IPO: Investors Excited Despite Skepticism Over Ambitious AI Plans
Urgent
TechCrunch6/10/2026Business5 min readUnited States

SpaceX IPO: Investors Excited Despite Skepticism Over Ambitious AI Plans

Quick Look

  • SpaceX's highly anticipated IPO faces investor excitement despite significant financial and engineering challenges.
  • The company's ambitious plan for orbital data centers relies on unproven technologies like fully reusable rockets and a US chip foundry, with valuations debated by financial analysts.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

SpaceX is preparing for its $75 billion IPO, reportedly deeply over-subscribed. The company's valuation is nearly $1.8 trillion according to its bankers, but financial analyses from Morningstar and Aswath Damodaran suggest a lower valuation.

Font size

SpaceX is coming to market on Friday, and investors can barely contain their excitement. The $75 billion stock offering is reportedly deeply over-subscribed, with some institutional investors ponying up for $10 billion blocks of Elon Musk’s empire.

There are lots of reasons to be skeptical of the investment — big IPOs tend to sink, the company is losing money, and Musk’s erratic online behavior would be terrifying coming from any other tech CEO — but it doesn’t seem to be slowing anyone down. Tech investors have learned to never bet against Elon, whatever the business logic indicates.

But a dispassionate look at SpaceX’s financial plans can still tell us a lot about what they’re betting on: A business centered around orbital data centers that emerged in the last 18 months as Musk sought a vision that would unite his conglomerate ahead of its IPO.

In true Musk style, it’s a bold scheme, and one that requires at least three near-impossible feats of engineering: a reusable rocket, a brand-new American chip foundry, and a sprint to build satellites faster than ever before.

That kind of business plan can be difficult to score. This week, two analyses tried to offer a more a sober assessment of SpaceX’s plan — one from Morningstar, the financial research firm, and another from Aswath Damodaran, a New York University finance professor who takes a special interest in corporate valuation. Both exercises find SpaceX significantly less valuable than the nearly $1.8 trillion assessment proffered by the company’s bankers. Morningstar assigns a value of about $825 billion, while Damodaran suggests the company is worth $1.2 trillion.

The significant difference is, in many ways, the result of bolting a world-beating space monopoly to a far riskier AI business. Morningstar’s analyst characterizes the difference between their assessment of a fair value of $63 a share, and SpaceX’s offering price of $135, as a $72 call option on the company’s ability to deliver orbital data centers at the rate and capability that Musk believes is possible.

In both analyses, the high margins of the company’s space launch business and its satellite internet network are the most attractive things about the company, while its AI business is the most uncertain.

To cloud or not to cloud?

Part of the question is, what is SpaceX’s AI business? In the company’s S-1 market analysis, it frames its largest opportunity in enterprise AI — that its models will power coding tools built by the team it acqui-hired from Cursor, or the company’s Macrohard project, which is intended to equip digital agents with the capabilities to perform white-collar labor. SpaceX assessed the total market for that business as $22.7 trillion, compared to $2.4 trillion for AI infrastructure and just under $2 trillion for the company’s space efforts.

But that contradicts the company’s recent deals to sell significant amounts of compute to Anthropic and Google, ostensible competitors in the model business. That’s not out of place for a Musk company; SpaceX frequently launches satellites operated by competitors to its Starlink network. It just usually does that from a place of strength, not while playing catch-up.

Acting like a neocloud might be good near-term business, but it raises the question of where value will accrue in the AI tech stack: Is it better to be a compute provider or a model-builder, if you can’t be both?

The scaling logic that dominates the AI business demands that serious frontier labs constantly train new and more powerful models (or, as Musk admitted in his recent lawsuit against Sam Altman, by distilling capabilities from other companies’ models). Any competitor not rushing ahead is likely to fall behind, although the rising abilities of cheaper open source models might undermine that dynamic.

Space data centers are one way to square the circle, providing so much compute that SpaceX could effectively do both.

Musk’s space data center architecture

In a video interview released by SpaceX this week, Musk laid out the logic for why SpaceX is best positioned to deliver on data centers. The core of the argument was that SpaceX is the only company capable of putting a lot of mass on orbit cheaply, building a lot of solar panels, and building a lot of chips. In general, industry experts see space data centers at scale being about a decade away, but Musk argued (with a lot of caveats) that they are much closer.

“This is not a promise of what we’ll do,” Musk said in the video. “This is what we are going to try to do, and think we probably can do, which is to get to roughly an annualized rate of a gigawatt per year by the end of next year, in terms of space AI compute.”

Based on his expected maximum power delivery of 150 kW per satellite, that’s a production rate of 6,666 satellites a year, or about 556 a month. That’s roughly twice the reported current production rate of Starlink satellites, which is just 70 a week. Though Musk says that the AI satellites are simpler in architecture, that’s a lot to ask for a production facility that hasn’t been built yet. The company is also still building out its solar panel production facility.

That’s before we get to Terafab, the company’s much-discussed chip foundry, which Musk sees feeding into the later stages of this product as the company tries to scale up to a terawatt of annual compute production. Chip fabs are some of the hardest modern industrial projects, typically costing billions of dollars and taking as long as a decade to build.

Then there’s the most vital question: What about Starship, the key to SpaceX’s ability to economically put all those chips in orbit?

A recent test flight went well enough, but it didn’t suggest that rapid reusability is right around the corner. SpaceX may end up reusing just the booster at first, which would raise the costs of the space data center roll-out. For now, the company is still undergoing a mishap investigation for the FAA to understand why the booster stage failed to make a controlled reentry as planned. SpaceX hasn’t responded to questions about when the vehicle will fly again, thought it has said it expects to begin launching Starlink satellites with it by the end of this year.

But take that with a grain of salt: Consider that NASA, which has a nearly $4 billion contract with SpaceX to use Starship as a moon lander, still isn’t ready to commit to a test mission with the vehicle scheduled for late 2027.

Buyer Beware

As public investors get their hands on SpaceX shares, they’ll find themselves owning a near-monopoly on access to space in the U.S. and Europe, a world-spanning communications network, and a wager on the most ambitious infrastructure project of the AI era.

Those projects depend on SpaceX creating something never seen before — a fully reusable rocket. The company will also need to build a high-rate production facility for AI satellites, but do so in 18 months, not the decade it took to develop its Starlink manufacturing. Finally, it will need to build a chip foundry in the U.S., something even dedicated silicon firms are reluctant to take on. Musk is right that SpaceX is the only company positioned to build any of this anytime soon, but that speaks to the magnitude of the challenge as much as the company’s likelihood of achieving it.

Musk used to say he wouldn’t take SpaceX public until he reached Mars, since fickle investors might lose faith along the way. Those plans may have been put on hold, but what he’s laid out ahead of the company’s IPO could be just as difficult.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • SpaceX will attempt to build orbital data centers at scale.

    Likely · Medium term

  • SpaceX will face significant engineering hurdles in developing reusable rockets and chip foundries.

    Very likely · Medium term

  • The valuation of SpaceX's AI business will remain a point of contention among analysts.

    Very likely · Short term

Open Questions

  • Can SpaceX achieve its ambitious engineering feats for orbital data centers?
  • What is the long-term viability of SpaceX's AI business model?
  • How will the success of the Starship program impact the orbital data center rollout?
  • Will SpaceX's chip foundry be able to scale effectively?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by TechCrunch.

Related Stories

More on this topicSpaceX