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Is SpaceX really going public? Wall Street is already drooling, but Musk might not be done playing yet!
Recently, rumors about SpaceX IPO are becoming more like a soap opera.
Today they say the bell will ring on June 12, tomorrow they mention the ticker SPCX, and the day after someone starts calculating whether the post-IPO market cap will surpass Apple directly.
All I can say is:
The capital market’s hunger for SpaceX is almost impossible to contain.
After all, this is one of the world’s most scarce assets.
There are many AI companies, many new energy companies, but only one company that can launch rockets, deploy Starlink, secure NASA contracts, and study colonizing Mars.
The problem is—does Musk really lack money?
The answer might be: not at all.
The most terrifying thing about SpaceX now isn’t making money, but its ridiculously strong fundraising ability.
Global sovereign funds, Wall Street capital, Silicon Valley giants, almost all in line to invest. It’s not like a traditional company; it’s more like a “planet-level VIP project.”
Since private markets can raise sky-high amounts, why rush to go public?
Because going public, while offering greater liquidity, also brings trouble:
Quarterly earnings reports, regulatory pressure, public opinion amplification, shareholder push for management changes.
Don’t forget, Musk is the man who can post in the middle of the night saying “I want to privatize the company.”
Would you let someone like that hold a performance meeting every day?
The scene is already starting to look funny.
So I actually think:
The more the market screams for an IPO, the more SpaceX might deliberately delay.
Because the phrase “about to go public” itself can continuously boost the valuation.
And the real key to pushing the IPO through isn’t market sentiment, but Starlink’s business.
If in the future, Starlink’s cash flow becomes more stable, even independently profitable, then SpaceX truly has the “space version of a cash cow” attribute.
At that point, an IPO would be more than just fundraising; it would be a global capital race for tickets.
So my prediction is:
Preheating begins around 2026, with a higher probability of officially hitting the Nasdaq around 2027.
As for the current “June 12,” it’s more like Wall Street’s early climax.
After all, Musk’s favorite thing is to make the whole world guess, then suddenly change the script himself. #Polymarket每日热点