SpaceX’s stock market debut makes Musk a trillionaire

Jun 12, 2026
spacex’s-stock-market-debut-makes-musk-a-trillionaire

FILE PHOTO - Elon Musk, head of space company SpaceX and Tesla CEO, arrives at the Axel Springer Award ceremony. (is associated with: «SpaceX's stock market debut makes Musk a trillionaire») Britta Pedersen/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa-pool/dpa

FILE PHOTO – Elon Musk, head of space company SpaceX and Tesla CEO, arrives at the Axel Springer Award ceremony. (is associated with: «SpaceX’s stock market debut makes Musk a trillionaire») Britta Pedersen/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa-pool/dpa

Elon Musk has become the world’s first trillionaire following the record stock market debut of his space company SpaceX, with shares opening more than 11% above their issue price of $135 and later extending gains to around 20%, pushing the company’s market value above $2 trillion.

Musk is the founder and chief executive of SpaceX and holds a stake of around 40%. At Friday’s prices, his SpaceX holding alone is worth more than $800 billion, making it the largest part of his fortune.

His shares and options in electric carmaker Tesla, which he also leads, push him above the trillion-dollar mark.

However, this is entirely paper wealth in the form of equity holdings, which is subject to market fluctuations and cannot easily be converted into cash.

Largest IPO to date

SpaceX, known among other things for its Starlink satellite internet service, sold around 555.6 million shares at the issue price of $135, raising $75 billion in the process.

The previous record for the largest initial public offering (IPO) was held by Saudi Arabian oil company Aramco, which raised just over $29 billion in 2019.

At the issue price alone, SpaceX was already valued at $1.77 trillion, more than Facebook parent company Meta. At the opening price, the company ranks among the most valuable US firms, behind only Nvidia, Apple, Google parent Alphabet, Microsoft and Amazon.

Nvidia, boosted by the AI boom, holds the top spot with a current valuation of just under $5 trillion.

Billions in losses on SpaceX’s balance sheet

SpaceX’s underlying business figures stand in stark contrast to its market valuation, with investors paying largely for the hope of future success. Last year, the company posted losses of around $4.94 billion on revenue of $18.67 billion.

In the future, artificial intelligence is set to be SpaceX’s biggest business, including through data centres in space. The idea is that the sun can supply abundant energy there. Sceptics, however, point to challenges such as the considerable construction costs, difficult cooling despite the low temperatures in space and radiation that could damage circuitry.

In its prospectus, SpaceX estimated the future total market for artificial intelligence including infrastructure at more than $26 trillion, citing this as one justification for its high valuation.

New York economics professor Aswath Damodaran, known as a valuation expert, was sharply critical. He said that when he read the figure, he thought Musk’s chatbot Grok had written the prospectus.

“This is a hallucination,” Damodaran told US broadcaster CNBC. “I would be embarrassed to even put that number out.”

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