Elon Musk’s SpaceX has made its debut on the stock market, with shares surpassing their starting price of $135 (about €117) within hours of its initial public offering (IPO) on the Nasdaq on Friday.
Shares were hovering around $173 shortly after 1 p.m. in New York (1700 GMT/UTC), an increase of about 28%, equating to a market capitalization of about $2.26 trillion for the Texas-based space and satellite and broadband internet company.
This valuation makes Musk the first person in history to have a trillion-dollar fortune, at least on paper — primarily through his stakes in SpaceX and electric car maker Tesla. As of Friday afternoon, US business publication Forbes estimated Musk’s updated net worth at around $1.1 trillion.
How much money was raised from the record IPO?
SpaceX sold about 555.6 million shares at the issue price of $135, raising its target by $75 billion in the process.
It was easily the most lucrative IPO in history, surpassing the nearly $29 billion raised by Saudi Arabian oil giant Aramco in 2019.
Musk, joining via videolink from a ceremonial bell ringing at Starbase, SpaceX’s South Texas home, on Friday, said the company is going public now because it needs funding to meet goals like launching more satellites and even data centers into space.
He reiterated his goal to “make life multi-planetary.”
“Not just some astronauts, I mean really you,” Musk said. “Whatever way you look at it, SpaceX wants to be able to take you to the Moon, take you to Mars, and ultimately beyond.”
How does SpaceX’s market cap match its revenues and profits (or losses)?
Unlike Musk’s other cash cow, Tesla, it’s not immediately clear why SpaceX can command such a high valuation from investors.
The South African’s own celebrity and success as a hype man, coupled with the company’s future performance potential, plays a bigger role in valuation than current fundamentals.
Last year, SpaceX had revenue of $18.7 billion, and it had a net loss of $4.9 billion on big investments in AI and other projects.
Therefore, Friday’s market capitalization valuation is more than a century worth the company’s current revenues. By comparison, struggling Volkswagen’s market capitalization of €48.46 billion represents less than two months of the carmaker’s revenue.
In other words, Volkswagen Group generates more revenue in a fortnight than SpaceX in a year – at a profit, not a loss – and yet it is valued by investors at less than 40 times that.
As far as profits are concerned, SpaceX has not recorded a net profit in any calendar year. But similar issues did little to slow the stratospheric rise in Tesla shares in recent years.
SpaceX is now one of the most valuable US businesses, trailing only Nvidia, Apple, Google parent Alphabet, Microsoft and Amazon. Tesla is valued at $1.26 trillion by market capitalization, even though it has finally started making regular profits.
Nvidia, fueled by the AI boom, is currently in a league of its own in the overall nominal valuation league tables, valued by investors at around $5 trillion.
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Edited by: Shawn Sinico
