SpaceX has set a June 12 target date for its Nasdaq listing, accelerating an IPO timeline that sources familiar with the matter had previously pegged for late third quarter, according to a Reuters exclusive. The move arrives with SpaceX carrying a $150 billion private valuation from its December tender offer, making this the largest debut by dollar valuation since Rivian's $66.5 billion November 2021 listing.
The timeline compression follows four consecutive quarters of Starlink subscriber growth exceeding 15 percent sequentially, with the satellite-internet division now generating an estimated $6.6 billion in annualized revenue. SpaceX has not filed an S-1 with the SEC as of this writing, but the June 12 date suggests a confidential filing already in motion, placing the likely roadshow window in mid-May. Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are expected to lead the syndicate, per two people with knowledge of the underwriting discussions. The company's Falcon 9 booster reusability rate now sits at 80 percent across 96 launches in 2024 through March, a figure that underpins margin assumptions in pre-marketing materials circulating among late-stage growth funds.
What matters here is less the valuation—secondary markets already price SpaceX at $150 billion—and more the liquidity event's effect on defense-prime comps and the trajectory of private space infrastructure. A successful debut resets the multiple bands for launch-services providers and satellite operators, especially firms with government contracts. Rocket Lab, trading at 4.2x forward revenue, would compress toward legacy aerospace multiples if SpaceX prints at 8x or higher, a spread that reflects Starlink's recurring SaaS-like income stream. The IPO also forces a mark on venture positions: Founders Fund, Sequoia, and Gigafund hold stakes last marked in the December tender, and a public reference price will ripple through Q2 NAV calculations across 40-plus venture funds with SpaceX exposure. Meanwhile, Starlink's path to 10 million subscribers by year-end, up from an estimated 2.3 million today, positions the segment as a $20 billion revenue business on a run-rate basis—enough to justify a separate tracking stock or spinout within 18 months post-IPO.
Allocators should monitor three items: the S-1 filing, expected within 10 days if the June 12 date holds; Starlink ARPU disclosure, which will clarify whether the business trends closer to fixed broadband or enterprise connectivity margins; and any Musk commentary on the Tesla-SpaceX structural relationship, given cross-holdings and shared engineering resources. The IPO prospectus will also reveal NASA contract renewal timing and Department of Defense launch commitments through 2027, both of which anchor the revenue base outside Starlink. If SpaceX prices above $160 billion, expect immediate follow-on filings from Relativity Space and Firefly Aerospace, both of which have delayed SPAC mergers citing market conditions.
The June 12 listing lands three weeks before the next Falcon Heavy launch window and two months ahead of NASA's Artemis III crew-assignment announcement, both catalysts that support a post-debut momentum narrative.
The takeaway
SpaceX's June 12 Nasdaq target compresses the timeline and resets space-infrastructure comps; Starlink's **$6.6B** run rate is the valuation anchor.
spacexipostarlinknasdaqcapital marketsaerospace
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