SpaceX is moving closer to a long-anticipated public debut, with plans to file its initial public offering prospectus later this week or next week, a step that could culminate in one of the largest capital raises in market history.
According to a person with direct knowledge of the process, who spoke to The Information, advisers on the transaction expect the company to seek to raise more than $75 billion, placing the offering in rare territory alongside the biggest listings ever attempted. The final structure remains under discussion, but allocations to individual investors could exceed 20%, an unusually large share that signals an effort to tap strong retail demand alongside institutional capital.
The prospective listing arrives at a moment when investor sentiment toward the space economy is shifting. What was once viewed as a speculative frontier is increasingly being reframed as core infrastructure, underpinned by declining launch costs, the rapid scaling of satellite constellations, and a growing intersection with data-intensive technologies such as artificial intelligence.
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That shift was evident in early market reactions. Shares of space-linked companies, including Rocket Lab, Planet Labs, and AST SpaceMobile, edged higher in premarket trading following news of the potential IPO, reflecting expectations that a SpaceX listing could reprice the sector and draw fresh capital into adjacent businesses.
At the center of the offering is a company that has redefined the economics of spaceflight. Since its founding in 2002 by Elon Musk, SpaceX has established itself as the dominant launch provider globally, leveraging reusable rocket technology to cut costs and increase launch frequency. Its Falcon 9 system has become the workhorse of the industry, while the Starship programme is intended to extend that model to heavier payloads and deeper space missions.
Parallel to its launch business, SpaceX has built a rapidly expanding communications platform through Starlink, which now stands as a significant and recurring revenue stream. The network’s scale and global reach have positioned it as both a commercial service and a strategic asset, with applications ranging from rural connectivity to defense communications.
The IPO would offer investors exposure to both segments, but the longer-term narrative extends further. SpaceX is increasingly positioning itself at the intersection of aerospace and digital infrastructure, with ambitions that include the development of orbital data systems. As demand for computing power surges, particularly from AI workloads, the concept of hosting data infrastructure in space, where energy and cooling constraints differ from terrestrial environments, is gaining attention.
That direction has been reinforced by the company’s recent acquisition of xAI, Musk’s AI venture, in a transaction that valued SpaceX at around $1 trillion and xAI at $250 billion. The deal suggests a deliberate alignment between space-based assets and AI capabilities, potentially creating an integrated platform spanning data generation, transmission, and processing.
The scale of the planned fundraising reflects the capital demands of that vision. Starship development alone is considered one of the most ambitious engineering efforts in the industry, while maintaining and expanding the Starlink constellation requires continuous investment in satellites and launch capacity. A public listing would provide access to deeper pools of capital, while also introducing new scrutiny from shareholders.
There are also broader market implications. A SpaceX IPO could draw in investors from outside the traditional aerospace sector, including those already active in Tesla, where Musk’s influence has cultivated a large and engaged retail base. Such crossover interest could amplify demand for the offering and reshape how space companies are valued relative to other high-growth technology firms.
Still, the scale of the proposed raise will test market appetite at a time when investors are balancing enthusiasm for transformative technologies with caution over valuations and capital intensity. SpaceX’s dual identity, as both a revenue-generating enterprise and a long-horizon innovation platform, is challenging that assessment.
The listing is expected to mark a defining moment for the commercial space industry, establishing a public market benchmark for a sector that has largely operated in private capital markets. More broadly, it would signal that space is no longer a peripheral bet, but an emerging pillar of the global technology and infrastructure industry.



