SpaceX IPO live updates: Elon Musk’s company set for biggest market debut ever

Jun 12, 2026
spacex-ipo-live-updates:-elon-musk’s-company-set-for-biggest-market-debut-ever

Space stocks deepen losses after SpaceX debut

Nasdaq president says $15 billion of SpaceX raise was retail, larger than most IPOs

Nasdaq President Nelson Griggs told CNBC that SpaceX’s opening trade came together faster and more efficiently than expected, with Morgan Stanley leading the stabilization process and the stock opening on 58 million shares at $150.

“It wasn’t Nasdaq — it was the whole community, led by Morgan Stanley stabilizing. We got to the order size they were looking to in a very efficient manner,” Griggs said. “They saw a lot of support in the book.”

Griggs said the IPO benefited from a diversified order book, including long-only investors, active traders and unusually strong retail participation. He estimated that roughly $15 billion of the raise came from retail investors, calling that allocation “larger than most IPOs” and saying Tesla’s heavily retail-owned shareholder base likely helped drive excitement around the SpaceX debut.

With the stock trading roughly 20% above its opening price shortly after the first trade, Griggs said Nasdaq was watching volatility closely, but did not see signs that trading would need to be paused under limit-up, limit-down rules.

He called demand for the offering “incredible” and said other companies preparing to go public would likely study the SpaceX listing as a blueprint for how the market can digest a mega-cap IPO.

MacKenzie Sigalos

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon congratulates SpaceX on social media

David Solomon, CEO Goldman Sachs, speaking on CNBC’s Squawk Box at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 22nd, 2026.

Oscar Molina | CNBC

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon congratulated SpaceX in a post on X on Friday, writing that he is proud of the “strong partnership” the two companies have built. Goldman served as the lead left bookrunner on the transaction.

“I’ve known Elon for more than 15 years, as have several of my colleagues, and it’s been incredible to see his vision come to life and to work with Gwynne, Bret, and the entire team,” Solomon wrote.

“We are excited as SpaceX enters this new chapter of its journey as a public company, and we look forward to supporting their mission of advancing the frontier of human space exploration,” he said.

—Ashley Capoot

Tesla shares decline as investors’ focus shifts to SpaceX debut

The Tesla brand logo can be seen on May 28, 2026 at a location of the car manufacturer in Parsdorf near Munich (Bavaria, Germany).

Matthias Balk | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

Tesla shed about 2% on Friday, as investors’ attention shifted to the SpaceX market debut.

Elon Musk’s aerospace and defense conglomerate has surpassed a $2 trillion valuation, and is now worth more than his automaker Tesla, which had a market capitalization of about $1.2 trillion as of early Friday.

In an amended IPO filing, SpaceX said it may issue “significant equity” to fund future transactions. That sparked fresh speculation around a merger between SpaceX and Tesla.

Tesla had invested $2 billion in xAI before it was acquired by SpaceX, with those shares making it a stakeholder in SpaceX.

 —Lora Kolodny

Alphabet’s stake in SpaceX hits $105 billion

Alphabet may be one of the biggest hidden winners in the SpaceX IPO. The company owns roughly 4.9% of SpaceX, a stake now worth about $105 billion — making it one of Google’s most lucrative private-market bets ever.

But cashing out is not as simple as selling into the first trade. Alphabet still faces lockups, liquidity limits and a potential tax hit on any outright sale.

MacKenzie Sigalos

SpaceX opens at $150 per share

SpaceX begins trading at the Nasdaq MarketSite on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

SpaceX opened Friday at $150 per share, officially marking an approximately 11% gain over its $135 IPO price.

But that price is lower than where indications of interest showed the rocket startup could begin trading. The price was initially indicated to trading desks at $175, a price that’s more than 16% higher than where the stock ended up opening.

— Alex Harring

SpaceX first trade now at $150 per share

SpaceX’s indications of interest to trading desks now shows the first trade will come in around $150 per share. That’s down significantly from levels seen earlier in the day and the $175 price displayed initially.

The latest indications suggest that SpaceX will open with a roughly 11% increase from its IPO price of $135.

— Alex Harring

Nasdaq president on how the exchange opens a mega IPO like SpaceX

A live feed shows SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on the day of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite, in New York City, U.S., June 12, 2026.

Jeenah Moon | Reuters

Nasdaq President Nelson Griggs told CNBC that opening a record-breaking IPO is less about ringing the bell than finding the right first trade — especially for a company the size of SpaceX.

Speaking from Nasdaq on listing day, Griggs said that for a deal of this scale, the stabilization agent typically wants to find orders for about 10% of the shares sold in the offering before setting the opening price. In SpaceX’s case, he said that would mean roughly 55 million shares.

After earlier indications around $175, SpaceX’s expected opening trade moved closer to $160, underscoring the price-discovery process Griggs described.

The listing also comes with a near-term index implication. Griggs said SpaceX would be eligible to enter the Nasdaq 100 within about 15 days, reflecting its expected place among the world’s largest non-financial companies by market cap.

MacKenzie Sigalos

SpaceX board member says company is one of the most consequential in ‘human history’

SpaceX board member Antonio Gracias: I plan on holding my stake for as long as I can

SpaceX board member Antonio Gracias told CNBC that he thinks SpaceX is “one of the most consequential companies in human history.”

Gracias, who is also the founder and managing partner of Valor Equity Partners, said he plans to hold his stake in SpaceX “as long as I possibly can.” Most of the firm’s 7% stake is owned by its clients.

He said he wasn’t sure about whether there could be a merger between SpaceX and Musk’s automaker Tesla, noting that decision is “way above my pay grade.”

—Ashley Capoot

‘Dean of Valuation’ calls SpaceX’s addressable market a ‘hallucination’

SpaceX's valuation looks 'richly priced,' says NYU's Aswath Damodaran

The so-called Dean of Valuation has qualms about SpaceX’s market value of approximately $1.8 trillion.

“SpaceX is an amazing company. It’s an engineering marvel,” Aswath Damodaran, a New York University finance professor, told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” Friday. But, “even if you build the biggest possible stories, getting to 1.8 trillion takes a lot of work.”

Assigning a valuation of $1.3 trillion already “takes the bull’s case and carries it to its limits,” he said.

“This is not a small story. It’s one of the biggest stories I’ve ever told,” Damodaran said. “I just don’t know how much give there is in the story to get past 1.3 trillion.”

Damodaran said seeing SpaceX’s addressable market of $28.5 trillion made him think the prospectus was written by Grok, the Elon Musk-owned artificial intelligence assistant, rather than a banker.

“This is a hallucination,” Damodaran said. “I would be embarrassed to even put that number out.”

— Alex Harring

SpaceX first trade now $162 per share

Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer, is joined by SpaceX executives and employees as they ring the Opening Bell at the Nasdaq MarketSite to celebrate the launch of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) in New York on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

SpaceX’s indications of interest to trading desks are now showing the first trade would be around $162 a share, down from the $175 level first shown initially.

The indications signal SpaceX would still open with a 20% gain from its $135 IPO price.

—John Melloy

Sequoia’s Shaun Maguire likens SpaceX to Nvidia three years ago

Sequoia's Maguire likens SpaceX to Nvidia three years ago, says he'll hold his shares 'forever'

Shaun Maguire, partner at Sequoia Capital, compared SpaceX today to another major AI beneficiary: Nvidia.

“I personally think SpaceX right now is more like Nvidia three years ago than Tesla, which I think a lot of investors comp it to,” Maguire said. “And what I mean by that is I personally have very high confidence in explosive revenue growth.”

Maguire added that as an individual investor, he is “going to hold my shares forever.”

− CJ Haddad

Shotwell says SpaceX is a ‘company of patriots’

Shotwell told CNBC that SpaceX is committed to serving the government and seeing out those contracts in addition to its commercial ones.

“We’re a company of patriots, and we want to make sure that our government has access to the leading technology and the best stuff, and I think we provide the best stuff,” she said.

She added that SpaceX is “always going to support our government.”

– Laya Neelakandan

SpaceX now indicated to open around $165 a share

SpaceX’s first trade may be slightly lower than first indicated as Wall Street trading desks scramble to meet supply and demand of orders and open the biggest IPO ever. Although it is still expected to open with a big double-digit gain.

The latest so-called indications of interest were last at $165 a share, down from the $175 level first shown initially. That still means SpaceX would open with a 22% pop from its $135 IPO price.

The indications are sent in before the offering opens and are used by trading desks to set the first trade. This process is likely to take several more hours because of the sheer size of the SpaceX IPO and the sizable participation of retail traders in this offering.

—John Melloy

Shotwell on retail investor interest: Musk is ‘trying to make space open for everybody’

Gwynne Shotwell SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer interviews with CNBC during the company’s IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

SpaceX has drawn massive enthusiasm from retail investors looking to get in on the mega IPO, and Shotwell said that focus reflects Musk’s vision for the company.

“He’s trying to make space open for everybody,” she said. “He wanted this IPO, he wanted regular people to be able to buy the stock, and a lot of folks participated at the retail level.”

Shotwell said she hopes SpaceX sets an example for companies to allow more people to buy stock in the future.

“I’m not saying I don’t love our institutional investors,” she said. “They’ve been incredibly supportive, and they continue to be, but we’ve had so much demand over the last few years from friends and from family and from Tesla shareholders.”

— Samantha Subin

Shotwell on Iran threats: ‘We’ll keep forging ahead’

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell on Iran threats: ‘We’ll keep forging ahead’

Shotwell said SpaceX isn’t deterred by Iran’s threats to target Elon Musk’s companies in the Middle East. SpaceX has faced threats “at all levels,” she said.

“I think when you’re doing things that are really different and you’re doing things that are trying to change the world, I think some people and some countries get mad, you know, but we always try to do the right thing,” Shotwell said. “We’ll keep forging ahead.”

Iranian state media reported Thursday that the country is targeting “all interests related to economic holdings managed by Elon Musk in West Asia,” including a regional Starlink ground station.

— Annie Palmer

Shotwell says Musk is ‘very misunderstood’

Elon Musk is ‘very misunderstood,' says SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell

Shotwell told CNBC she thinks Musk is “very misunderstood.” She said investors were impressed with him during discussions ahead of the IPO.

“The investors left saying, ‘I had no idea that that is the man,’ and I said, ‘That’s the man I’ve worked for for 24 years. I love him,'” Shotwell said.

—Ashley Capoot

Shotwell says $28.5 trillion addressable market reflects need for all devices and people to ‘phone home’

Gwynne Shotwell SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer interviews with CNBC during the company’s IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

One eye-popping figure in SpaceX’s IPO filing is the company’s claim that its total addressable market is $28.5 trillion, which is mostly tied to AI enterprise applications. That’s a place where SpaceX doesn’t currently do much.

Shotwell said the number reflects all the “digital humans” and “humanoid robots” and “cars on the planet being full self-driving.” She said they all need AI and communications and will all need to “phone home.”

“They’ll be using Starlink for that,” Shotwell said.

—Ari Levy

Shotwell talks potential business risks, says there’s nothing she’s ‘super worried’ about

A live feed shows SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on the day of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite, in New York City, U.S., June 12, 2026.

Jeenah Moon | Reuters

Shotwell said she isn’t seeing any current business risks that are sounding the alarm.

“I don’t think there’s anything sitting in front of us that I’m super worried about,” she said. “I don’t see any technology or any endeavor that we’re looking at doing that I’m afraid we can’t do.”

— Samantha Subin

Shotwell on SpaceX: “I look at ourselves as an infrastructure company”

Gwynne Shotwell on SpaceX: 'I look at ourselves as an infrastructure company'

Gwynne Shotwell, president and COO of SpaceX, said that the company is “100%” an emerging competitor in the artificial intelligence neocloud space.

“We are builders, we build our own launch vehicles, we build our launch sites, and we’re building data centers both on the ground as well as in orbit soon,” Shotwell told CNBC in an interview. “So, I look at ourselves as an infrastructure company.”

− CJ Haddad

Shotwell says SpaceX’s AI1 satellites will launch late next year

Shotwell told CNBC she expects SpaceX will launch its AI1 satellites late next year, but that the company will be putting compute on some of the Starlink broadband and the Starlink mobile satellites prior to that.

“Want to make sure we understand the operation,” Shotwell said. “We love doing kind of canary sets and canary work before we fly the real thing.”

—Ashley Capoot

Shotwell says SpaceX investors should watch Starship, Starlink growth

Gwynne Shotwell SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer interviews with CNBC during the company’s IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

Asked what are the key metrics for SpaceX investors, Shotwell said they should keep an eye on the company’s progress developing Starship, its massive, fully reusable rocket.

She also called out growth of consumer and enterprise Starlink customers, Starlink Mobile, and Grok, the chatbot run by its AI unit xAI.

“There’s actually a lot going on,” Shotwell said.

— Annie Palmer

Shotwell says SpaceX is looking for long-term investors, ‘not everything has to get done on the first day’

In response to the question of whether SpaceX should’ve upsized the offering, Shotwell told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan that “not everything has to get done on the first day.”

“We’re really looking for investors that want to stick with us for the long term, and I feel really proud about what we’ve done,” she said

— Samantha Subin

SpaceX IPO could rekindle retail buying and inspire more rebalancing, VandaTrack says

Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer, is joined by SpaceX executives and employees as they ring the Opening Bell at the Nasdaq MarketSite to celebrate the launch of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) in New York on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

VandaTrack says that while aggregate retail activity is still on track for its softest week of net buying since March 2020, SpaceX’s IPO could change things.

“One explanation for the weak retail activity in recent sessions is that investors have been raising liquidity ahead of the SpaceX IPO. Activity on venues like Hyperliquid — which allows speculative investors to trade SpaceX-tied derivatives — has exploded in recent days,” the market data provider wrote in a note. “This is consistent with speculative retail interest in SpaceX building ahead of the IPO.”

VandaTrack added that the liquidation of AI winners in recent sessions could be a retail funding source for SpaceX, noting that all signs point to retail investors rebalancing into the stock rather than deploying fresh capital. Space-linked proxy trades also could face rotation risk, as investors move out of space-linked names such as Rocket Lab and Redwire that have seen strong participation from retail buyers in recent months.

“The risk is that some of these positions were simply placeholders ahead of today’s IPO,” the firm wrote. “If investors decide SpaceX is the cleanest way to express the theme, some of these proxy trades could become a source of funding throughout today’s session.”

— Lisa Kailai Han

The family offices set to benefit — and why they bought in

A SpaceX banner is pictured on the day of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite, in New York City, U.S., June 12, 2026.

David Dee Delgado | Reuters

The investment firms of billionaires including ex-eBay President Jeff Skoll and AutoZone’s Pitt Hyde are set to reap rewards from SpaceX’s IPO. Gary Lauder, a cosmetics heir turned venture capitalist, backed SpaceX through his namesake family office.

Family offices who invest in space-related startups told CNBC that they view them as infrastructure and defense plays rather than flashy bets on space exploration.

Lauder said he was attracted to the strength of its Starlink satellite technology, not the prospect of space tourism. Much of his early investing was in telecommunications.

“I never dreamed of being an astronaut,” he said. “It’s just an important mode of communication.”

Robin Lauber’s Infinitas Capital invested in SpaceX in early 2025 through a secondary offering. He cited Musk’s track record and the success of Starlink as reasons to put money in. Lauber also said he thought the valuation then was “reasonable” compared with the more than $1.75 trillion expected now.

— Hayley Cuccinello

SpaceX indicated to open around $175, representing a 30% pop

SpaceX indicated to open around $175, representing a 30% pop

The first so-called indications of interest are coming through on SpaceX shares on Wall Street trading desks.

They indicate SpaceX would open around $175 a share, representing about a 30% pop from the IPO price of $135 a share.

The indications are sent in before an initial offering opens and are used by trading desks to set the first trade based on supply and demand for the stock.

CNBC’s Leslie Picker, reporting from Morgan Stanley’s desk, noted this is a long process and there are still likely several hours to go before the stock opens.

“That’s a fast ball right down the middle perfect,” said CNBC’s Jim Cramer on “Squawk on the Street” of the indication. “People will say it’s done fairly and those who had the foresight to put in for stock did well.”

—John Melloy

SpaceX-Linked Hyperliquid perps ease but are still up 27% from IPO price

Signage for SpaceX is pictured on the day of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite, in New York City, U.S., June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

The rally in SpaceX-tied perpetual futures on Hyperliquid slipped, with the SPCX-USDC contract trading near around $172, down from roughly 8.5% from around $176 earlier in the day. That’s still about 27% above the IPO price of $135 per share.

Trading activity on perps increased from earlier, with $322.5 million in 24-hour volume and open interest climbed to over $293 million.

— Tanaya Macheel

Crowd gathers around the Nasdaq as buzz builds

Onlookers during the SpaceX initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York, US, on Friday, June 12, 2026.

Adam Gray | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A growing crowd formed around the Nasdaq in New York City as the buzz builds for the SpaceX debut. Audible cheers were heard as Shotwell rang the opening bell from the Nasdaq.

A crowd watches SpaceX’s IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City on June 12, 2026.

Harriet Taylor | CNBC

—Harriet Taylor

Space stocks fall

Space stocks were under pressure, giving back gains seen in the premarket, as traders braced for the SpaceX IPO. Rocket Lab traded more than 5% lower, while Redwire shed 7%. Virgin Galactic dropped 24%.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

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SPCE drops

— Fred Imbert

Video: SpaceX rings the opening bell

SpaceX rings Nasdaq opening bell ahead of historic market debut

SpaceX launches Falcon 9 rocket in Florida ahead of Nasdaq listing

People watch as a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Starlink 10-54 mission lifts off from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on June 12, 2026.

Chandan Khanna | AFP | Getty Images

SpaceX launched its flagship Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, hours before the company’s stock is set to debut on the Nasdaq.

The mission will send 29 Starlink satellites into low-Earth orbit.

— Samantha Subin

Musk says SpaceX wants to take people to the Moon, Mars and beyond

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, speaks on a screen remotely from SpaceX headquarters in Starbase, Texas, speaks before the launch of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York on June 12, 2026.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

“Whoever you are watching this, SpaceX wants to be able to take you to the Moon, take you to Mars and ultimately beyond,” Musk said during his address to employees on Friday.

—Ashley Capoot

Accountability groups spotlight SpaceX’s legal problems linked to xAI and Grok deepfake porn

SpaceX signage seen at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City on June 12, 2026 for the company’s IPO.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

A collection of tech accountability groups are urging investors to remember that there’s more to SpaceX than reusable rockets.

Because Elon Musk’s company also houses his xAI firm and its Grok AI chatbot, it’s now involved in multiple lawsuits and regulatory probes related to the creation of sexualized, non-consensual imagery, sometimes referred to as deepfake porn, as CNBC previously reported.

Groups including the Heat Initiative, the Consumer Federation of America, and others held an online press conference on Thursday in which they attempted to tie together how the various sexualized deepfake lawsuits and probes fit within the larger SpaceX empire. Members of the organizations explained that the numerous legal and regulatory actions are not fading away once SpaceX goes public, but are likely to escalate and become bigger risks to investors, pension fund holders and other members of the financial community.

Tyler Whitmer, the CEO of the nonprofit Executives at Legal Advocates for Safe Science and Technology, or LASST, described how recent high-profile departures at xAI could potentially impact the company’s response to addressing more issues.

“It’s not just a matter of whether xAI is willing to do the work on safety, there’s also just a capacity question,” Whitmer said.

And despite these legal issues centering on xAI, Whitmer noted that they ultimately impact the wider SpaceX.

“Is the organization within SpaceX capable of doing the work on safety that they should be doing to protect not just the world but also investors?” Whitmer said. “Problems with safety are problems for shareholder value as well.”

Jonathan Vanian

Elon Musk gave SpaceX “less than a 10% chance of succeeding at all”

Elon Musk: SpaceX is about taking the fiction out of science fiction

“I gave SpaceX less than a 10% chance of succeeding at all,” Elon Musk told employees at the company’s Starbase headquarters ahead of the opening bell.

—CJ Haddad

Banks are taking home $500 million in fees from SpaceX’s IPO

SpaceX IPO bank fees: $500M

The banks underwriting SpaceX’s IPO are taking home a total of $500 million in fees.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley will bring in roughly $100 million apiece, followed by other lead underwriters Bank of AmericaCitigroup and JPMorgan Chase, who each landed about $75 million.

The hauls for the five banks’ fees represent roughly 85% of the total fee pool.

— Leslie Picker and CJ Haddad

Shotwell says SpaceX, Tesla merger ‘might make Elon’s life a little easier’

SpaceX President and COO Gwynne Shotwell sits down with CNBC’s Morgan Brennan to talk about the company’s IPO.

CNBC

Amid growing speculation of a SpaceX-Tesla merger, Shotwell told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan that combining both companies “might make Elon’s life a little easier.”

Shotwell acknowledged that both companies align, but said she’s focused on building rockets, improving broadband access, and getting to the International Space Station.

“There’s no question that there are synergies between Tesla and SpaceX in our futures,” she said. “There’s a convergence of what we’re all trying to accomplish in the future, but right now I’m focused on keeping the lights on here.”

Tesla and SpaceX already pool resources, including engineers, and Musk has discussed merging the companies, CNBC previously reported. Musk sits on both companies’ boards and holds over 80% of the voting power at SpaceX.

—Samantha Subin

Ben Narasin: If SpaceX doesn’t succeed, it could put a ‘true chill’ in the market

Tenacity's Ben Narasin: A weak SpaceX IPO could put a true chill on the market

Ben Narasin, the founder of Tenacity Venture Capital, told CNBC that if SpaceX “doesn’t fly,” it could put a “true chill” in the market and could be a “huge stall for everything else.”

“If it pops, everybody is just popping champagne and running to push their stuff out,” Narasin said. “We’ll see a tremendous amount of IPOs, not just OpenAI and Anthropic, but a lot of other great companies.”

—Ashley Capoot

Alphabet may be one of the biggest hidden winners of SpaceX IPO

Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet Inc., during the Google I/O Developers Conference in Mountain View, California, US, on Tuesday, May 19, 2026.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Alphabet invested $900 million in SpaceX more than a decade ago, added to its position over time and now owns roughly 4.9% of the $1.77 trillion company.

That would make SpaceX Alphabet’s most lucrative private market bet. The Google parent also has exposure to Cursor, the AI coding startup SpaceX has agreed to acquire. If that deal closes, Alphabet’s Cursor stake could potentially convert into additional SpaceX-linked upside.

But monetizing the SpaceX stake is not simple. Alphabet would be subject to a post-IPO lockup period, liquidity limits and a potential tax hit on an outright sale. One tax expert told CNBC the company could explore more tax-efficient structures, including exchangeable debt or a split-off, but none are as clean as simply selling shares and using the proceeds.

There are also strategic reasons for Alphabet to stay close to SpaceX, especially as Google looks for more ways to secure AI compute capacity.

The SpaceX position comes as Alphabet ramps up spending on AI infrastructure. Melius Research has modeled Alphabet’s free cash flow flipping negative next year as the company funds the build-out. That makes the SpaceX stake a powerful balance sheet asset — but not necessarily an easy source of cash.

MacKenzie Sigalos

Musk biographer says SpaceX debut is start of ‘whole new economy’

'Elon Musk' author Walter Isaacson on SpaceX IPO: We're seeing the beginning of a whole new economy

Famed journalist and Elon Musk biographer Walter Isaacson says SpaceX’s IPO will usher in a new wave of innovation for the space industry.

“It’s not just that you’re getting a new trillionaire, but you’re getting a whole new economy here, which is a space economy,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Friday.

This new economy includes Starlink satellites, future data centers in outer space, and could also expand to mineral mining, Isaacson said.

—Samantha Subin

SpaceX ‘demonstrated things that no one else can do,’ David George says

Andreessen Horowitz's David George on SpaceX IPO: Very excited about their setup competitively

Andreessen Horowitz’s David George said SpaceX has “demonstrated things that no one else can do.”

“This is the best entrepreneur of our generation in Elon, and he’s going after two of the biggest markets of all time, and two of the most important markets in technology for our society — so space and AI,” George told CNBC.

“They can send a Starship, which is the size of a football field, effectively up to space, land it back on Earth with the chopsticks − no one else is close to being able to do that.”

CJ Haddad

The Nasdaq opening window is set for 9:50 a.m. ET

Countdown to SpaceX's first trade: Here's what to expect

The Nasdaq opening window is set for 9:50 a.m. ET. That’s when indications for SpaceX’s opening price should start to appear.

—Ashley Capoot

SpaceX rivals OpenAI and Anthropic are also preparing to go public

Two of SpaceX’s major competitors in AI — OpenAI and Anthropic — are also gearing up for IPOs.

OpenAI, which is valued at $852 billion by private investors, confidentially filed its prospectus with the SEC on Monday. The company said it has not decided on timing, and that it’s weighing a “complicated set of tradeoffs.”

Anthropic announced it confidentially filed its prospectus with regulators earlier this month. The company said the IPO will “depend on market conditions and other factors.” Anthropic closed a funding round at a $965 billion valuation in May.

—Ashley Capoot

Elon Musk’s mother, Maye, arrives at the Nasdaq

Maye Musk arrives on the day of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City, U.S., June 12, 2026.

David Dee Delgado | Reuters

Maye Musk is the first family member pictured arriving at the Nasdaq for the debut of SpaceX.

The family has close ties to Elon’s companies, with his brother Kimbal on the Tesla board.

—Chris Eudaily

Space stocks jump with huge action in the options pits ahead of SpaceX IPO

Options volumes are booming in stocks with ties to SpaceX ahead of Friday’s historic debut.

Shares of EchoStar, which owns an estimated 3% of SpaceX stock, surged 11% Thursday and options volume was more than eleven times the 30-day average in ‘SATS’, according to data from Cboe’s LiveVol. AST Spacemobile jumped 12% Thursday alongside almost $140 million in options trading. 

EchoStar shares were higher by another 5% in early trading Friday. AST SpaceMobile was also trading higher in the premarket.

Read more here.

—Oliver Renick, John Melloy

Elon Musk set to hit trillionaire status

Elon Musk's road to trillionaire status: Here's what to know

SpaceX ‘perps’ trading indicate an initial pop of about 30%

A general view of a SpaceX building ahead of the SpaceX initial public offering (IPO), in Starbase, Texas, U.S., June 11, 2026.

Gabriel V. Cardenas | Reuters

Crypto traders in SpaceX-linked perpetual futures continue to price in a strong public-market debut for Elon Musk’s space company.

The SPCX-USDC perpetual contract was trading around $176 on Hyperliquid on Friday, about 30% higher than the IPO price of $135 per share, though still down sharply from the peak levels exceeding $220 in May.

More than $233 million worth of the perp changed hands over the past 24 hours, while open interest climbed above $263 million, indicating sustained speculative demand.

The contracts, which do not expire and are primarily traded by leverage-seeking crypto investors, are one of the market’s most active proxies for pre-IPO sentiment toward SpaceX.

— Tanaya Macheel

Polymarket traders see SpaceX crossing $2 trillion market cap

Traders on prediction market platform Polymarket think that SpaceX will close above a $2 trillion market cap after its IPO on Friday.

They place 70% odds for the stock to do so on its debut on the public markets. They also think there are near 50-50 odds it will close above $2.2 trillion in market cap. And they think it’s extremely likely the stock will rise today, with an 84% chance it closes above a $1.8 trillion valuation.

SpaceX at its IPO is valued at around $1.77 trillion.

Five other U.S. companies have reached the $2 trillion market cap benchmark: Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft and Amazon.

Davis Giangiulio

Protesters decry SpaceX AI safety record in Times Square

An inflatable likeness of SpaceX CEO Elon Musk stands in New York City as protest to Grok AI on June 11, 2026.

Ashley Capoot | CNBC

Protesters gathered in New York City’s Times Square one day ahead of SpaceX’s public debut, aiming to draw attention to Elon Musk’s track record where AI safety is concerned.

Musk’s Grok AI tools and social network X have come under fire for enabling users to easily create and distribute sexualized and violent images of real people, including children, based on their photos and without their consent.

Multiple international jurisdictions have launched formal investigations of xAI, now known as SpaceXAI, and the company was also sued over Grok in the U.S., including by the city of Baltimore, and by a group of women and girls who had been directly impacted.

In its IPO filings, SpaceX said it had “recorded an accrual of $530 million for litigation losses that are probable and reasonably estimable” resulting from these cases as of the end of 2025.

One group that described itself as a coalition of concerned citizens and industry and faith leaders, Safe AI Now, set up a 40-foot inflatable figure in Times Square depicting a pale, shirtless Musk with the words “SpaceX’s Grok Makes AI Child Porn” scrawled across his chest.

An inflatable likeness of SpaceX CEO Elon Musk stands in New York City as protest to Grok AI on June 11, 2026.

Ashley Capoot | CNBC

In an emailed statement to CNBC, the coalition said:

“The effigy of Musk bears a simple warning to investors: Musk built a dangerous and exploitative AI, covered up the damage, merged it with SpaceX, and is now selling the liability to the public at $135 a share.”

They added that “A company that enables child porn is inherently unstable and puts American investors and retirement funds at risk. SpaceX shareholders are on the hook for every Grok lawsuit, criminal investigation, and regulatory fine that is coming. All while Musk becomes a ‘paper trillionaire’ and his investors pick up the tab.”

—Lora Kolodny

How retail investors are prepping for SpaceX IPO

Retail investors have dumped artificial intelligence plays ahead of SpaceX’s IPO, according to VandaTrack.

The market data provider said individual traders have pulled back on AI-related names such as Micron, Advanced Micro Devices and Marvell Technology. Vanda said small traders may be shoring up money to play SpaceX’s market debut, in addition to the expected IPOs of OpenAI and Anthropic in the future.

“We’re already seeing signs that retail investors are rotating out of recent AI [favorites] ahead of the IPO wave,” Vanda told clients in a note this week.

—Alex Harring

Elon Musk’s ownership stake

Tesla CEO Elon Musk walks to board Air Force One with U.S. President Donald Trump (not pictured) as they depart for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from Morristown Municipal Airport in Morristown, New Jersey, on March 22, 2025.

Nathan Howard | Reuters

After its market debut, founder and CEO Elon Musk will have voting control of 82.4% in SpaceX, according to the company’s IPO filings. He will need to hold onto all of his SpaceX shares for a year, however.

“We believe that Mr. Musk’s substantial ownership interest in us provides him with an economic incentive to assist us to be successful,” SpaceX said in the risk factors section of its prospectus.

After a 366-day lock-up period, “Mr. Musk will not be subject to any obligation to maintain his ownership interest in us and may elect at any time thereafter to sell all or a substantial portion of or otherwise reduce his ownership interest in us,” the filing said.

SpaceX is officially a “controlled company” with no independent board majority. About 911 million insider shares, or about twice the public float, will unlock two days after the company’s first planned earnings report.

—Lora Kolodny

SpaceX spends more than it makes, even with Starlink as its cash cow

According to IPO filings, the company has racked up a deficit of around $41.3 billion since it was founded in 2002.

It has already spent more than $15 billion to develop its massive, Starship rocket, which it intends to be fully reusable in the future. Starship is also meant to bring NASA astronauts back to the surface of the moon, and eventually to Mars.

SpaceX said in its prospectus that its connectivity unit, primarily comprised of Starlink, generated $11.39 billion in 2025, accounting for 61% of total sales. In the first quarter of this year, it climbed to 69% of total sales.

The company cautioned investors in its prospectus about its history of net losses, and that it may not achieve profitability in the future. It lost $4.9 billion last year, and $4.28 billion in the first quarter of 2026, alone with both capital and operating expenses expected to increase as it spends heavily on Starship and AI initiatives.

—Lora Kolodny

SpaceX plans orbital data centers, skeptics highlight risks

On a livestream before the SpaceX IPO, Musk said he wanted to take the company public in part to raise money for the “massive capital endeavor” of building and running artificial intelligence data centers in space.

So-called orbital data centers “will be the primary means by which AI can be expanded,” Musk said. And putting data centers into orbit may help companies avoid the community backlash against data centers and the sometimes polluting power plants installed to run them on Earth.

“There are very few people who want a power plant in their backyard, so if we wanted to say double the electricity usage of the United States, which is on average about 500 gigawatts, we would have twice as many power plants,” he said.

In space, he mused, companies can “go far beyond the electricity generation of Earth,” by running their equipment on solar power around the clock.

However, space-based data centers are unproven so far, and have a panoply of associated risks.

Electronics required for AI training and inference are heavy to lift, power-hungry and require thermal regulation. Yet, cooling them can’t be done as easily in the vacuum of space.

Putting satellites packed with computing equipment in space could become less impractical with the adoption of chips that feature superconducting logic, rather than traditional semiconductors, said Peter Barrett, a general partner at venture firm Playground Global.

“Doing it the way they’re currently planning on doing it is madness, but it won’t be a problem, because it’s never going to happen,” he said.

SpaceX is not the only company working on orbital data centers, of course. Alphabet’s Project Suncatcher shares the same ambition. However, SpaceX’s timeline is aggressive.

The company aims to deploy its first satellites that can provide computing power for AI models as soon as 2028, according to its IPO prospectus.

—Jordan Novet and Lora Kolodny

Shotwell says we could see Starship in orbit by the end of the year

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell on Starship orbital flights: 'It largely depends on the FAA'

Shotwell said orbital flights for Starship “largely depends” on the Federal Aviation Administration, but the company should fly every month and we could see Starship in orbit by the end of this year.

“We have done an in-space Raptor lighting, so we feel pretty comfortable, but we want another suborbital shot on the next flight,” she said.

—Chris Eudaily

SpaceX IPO is Gwynne Shotwell’s ‘unveiling’

SpaceX President and COO Gwynne Shotwell sits down with CNBC’s Morgan Brennan to talk about the company’s IPO.

CNBC

Jennifer Nason, former global chair, investment banking at JPMorgan, told CNBC’s “Morning Call” that the SpaceX IPO is “a bit of an unveiling” for Gwynne Shotwell.

“Elon can take a lot of the oxygen out of the room, but she’s been there from the beginning,” Nason said.

—Chris Eudaily

COO Gwynne Shotwell had her doubts about an IPO

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell on the company's speed of innovation

SpaceX President and COO Gwynne Shotwell told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan that she “wasn’t sure we would go public.”

“Today, across SpaceX’s various businesses, the building blocks of a publicly traded company are now in place,” she said in an exclusive interview.

Shotwell is the company’s top executive underneath Musk.

“I do not want to focus on quarterly earnings,” she told Brennan. “I’m not saying we’re not going to do right by our investors, but what folks who invest in SpaceX need to know is that what we’re doing is very futuristic.”

—Chris Eudaily

How many shares are being sold and what is the market cap

SpaceX is offering 555,555,555 shares of Class A common stock in the IPO. At the $135 per share set price, the offering raised $75 billion.

There is an overallotment of 83,333,333 Class A shares available to underwriters for up to 30 days after the June 3 S-1A.

Without the overallotment, there are 13,075,865,175 Class A and B shares available immediately, which puts the SpaceX market cap at $1.77 trillion.

Should the overallotment be exercised, those would add to the total Class A and B shares and increase the market cap accordingly.

—Chris Eudaily

SpaceX buzz builds on WallStreetBets

SpaceX Starship lifts off from Starbase in Boca Chica, Texas, for its sixth flight test on November 19, 2024.

Chandan Khanna | Afp | Getty Images

SpaceX has been a hot topic on Reddit’s WallStreetBets, the discussion forum that became synonymous with the meme stock craze.

The rocket startup has been mentioned more than 1,600 times on the platform since Monday, according to data shared with CNBC by meme stock tracker Breakout Point. Those numbers have made it one of the most-discussed companies on WallStreetBets in the days leading up to the IPO, Breakout Point’s data shows.

—Alex Harring

SpaceX spends more than it makes, even with Starlink as its cash cow

According to IPO filings, the company has racked up a deficit of around $41.3 billion since it was founded in 2002.

It has already spent more than $15 billion to develop its massive, Starship rocket, which it intends to be fully reusable in the future. Starship is also meant to bring NASA astronauts back to the surface of the moon, and eventually to Mars.

SpaceX said in its prospectus that its connectivity unit, primarily comprised of Starlink, generated $11.39 billion in 2025, accounting for 61% of total sales. In the first quarter of this year, it climbed to 69% of total sales.

The company cautioned investors in its prospectus about its history of net losses, and that it may not achieve profitability in the future. It lost $4.9 billion last year, and $4.28 billion in the first quarter of 2026, alone with both capital and operating expenses expected to increase as it spends heavily on Starship and AI initiatives.

—Lora Kolodny

What SpaceX will use the funding for

A SpaceX Starship spacecraft rolls out toward its launch pad past the Starbase Manufacturing Facility before its 10th test flight from the company’s complex in Starbase, Texas, U.S., August 23, 2025.

Steve Nesius | Reuters

The capital raised in the IPO is expected to fund the further development of SpaceX’s massive Starship rockets, which are currently in a test flight phase and are not yet fully reusable.

The company will also use the funding for future artificial intelligence products and infrastructure, including a chip factory known as Terafab that SpaceX will build with Tesla and Intel in Texas.

—Lora Kolodny

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