SpaceX priced its initial public offering Friday and commenced trading, closing the largest public offering in U.S. history at a $150 billion valuation. Retail allocations moved through Schwab, Fidelity, Robinhood, SoFi, and Morgan Stanley's E-Trade — a distribution breadth previously reserved for sovereign debt, not aerospace equity.
The offering arrived without the typical roadshow theater. No revised price range. No extended marketing period. SpaceX filed, priced, and opened for trading inside 21 days — a timeline that reflects demand clarity rather than promotion. Starlink's $8.3 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue and 68% gross margins on satellite internet service removed the usual venture-to-public valuation ambiguity. The company did not need to explain its business model. It needed to allocate shares.
What matters here is capital structure durability, not first-day pop. SpaceX entered public markets with $4.1 billion in cash, $2.8 billion in debt, and a launch cadence that puts 94 Falcon 9 flights on the manifest through Q2 2027. The Starship program — previously a speculative line item in private pitch decks — now carries a $12 billion contract backlog, including NASA's Artemis lunar lander and three commercial lunar station modules. Public equity holders inherit a company that controls 62% of global orbital launch mass and operates the only reusable superheavy-lift platform in serial production. The IPO converts Elon Musk's 42% private stake into a $63 billion public position, but his operational control remains unchanged through dual-class voting structure. The company retains the governance of a founder-led private entity with the capital access of a large-cap public issuer.
Secondary effects are already visible in defense prime positioning and semiconductor exposure. Hanmi Semiconductor disclosed a 50 billion won ($33 million) SpaceX stake Friday, and shares moved 14% in Seoul on the announcement. The investment reflects supply chain participants frontrunning procurement volume as SpaceX scales Starlink Gen3 satellite production to 240 units per month by Q4 2027. Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing now face a public competitor with 3.2x their combined launch revenue and a cost structure built on vertical integration rather than cost-plus contracting. The defense primes do not have an answer to $1,500 per kilogram launch pricing. They have heritage and political relationships.
Allocators should track three items in the next 90 days: institutional ownership filings due mid-August, which will clarify whether sovereign wealth funds and pension systems treated this as core aerospace or technology allocation; Federal Communications Commission licensing decisions on Starlink's direct-to-device service, expected late July, which would open $18 billion in annual mobile carrier revenue; and quarterly earnings guidance structure, which SpaceX has never provided and may decline to start. The company's historical opacity does not reconcile easily with Regulation FD requirements, and the first earnings call will establish whether public investors receive the visibility they are paying for.
The IPO closes the twenty-year gap between SpaceX's 2002 founding and public market access, but it opens a longer question: whether a company with this margin profile and this revenue visibility can sustain a valuation that implies $1 trillion within five years. The math requires Starlink to reach 12 million subscribers at $1,200 annual ARPU and Starship to operate 48 commercial flights annually at $90 million per mission. Both are achievable. Neither is guaranteed. The market is pricing the path, not the arrival.