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Elon Musk’s SpaceX has fixed its initial public offering at $135 a share, planning to sell roughly 555.6 million Class A shares to raise about $75 billion and price the company at roughly $1.75–1.77 trillion.
The unusual move to set a firm price before a formal roadshow — which begins the week of June 4 — precedes a Nasdaq debut expected around June 12 under the ticker SPCX. The offering is structured as an all‑primary deal (no existing shareholders selling) with a 15% greenshoe option and an unusually large retail allocation reported as high as 30%. Post‑IPO governance provisions would leave Musk with roughly 82% of voting power; he has agreed to a 366‑day personal lockup.
Analysts including Morningstar estimate a far lower fair value (about $780 billion), citing heavy losses, xAI integration and speculative projects such as orbital data centres.
Lead underwriters include Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, BofA, Citigroup and J.P. Morgan.
The offering’s mechanics and Nasdaq rule changes that speed index inclusion are likely to shape demand and secondary market dynamics.
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ReutersSpaceX plans to set IPO price at $135 per share, targeting record $75 billion raise, source says
France 24 - International breaking news, top stories and headlinesSpaceX eyes $75 billion IPO, valuing company at $1.77 trillion
NBC News Top StoriesSpaceX aims to make its stock market debut at $1.77 trillion value
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Commenters add that Starlink may be the only clearly profitable unit but its economics are complicated by satellite depreciation; they warn that rapid index inclusion and a small public float could expose retirement and retail investors to outsized risk if the IPO is driven more by hype and insider dynamics than sustainable fundamentals.
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Tuesday, June 2, 2026 17:27 UTC
SpaceX sets IPO at $135 for $1.75 trillion
Tuesday, June 2, 2026 15:26 UTC
Morningstar pegs SpaceX fair value at $780 billion

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