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Musk's SpaceX Raises $25 Billion in Debut Bond Sale as Orders Near $90 Billion
Elon Musk’s SpaceX raised $25 billion in its first-ever corporate bond sale, drawing nearly $90 billion in investor orders, less than two weeks after the company’s record-setting initial public offering (IPO).
A Heavily Oversubscribed Debut
SpaceX priced $25 billion of investment-grade notes on June 23, in what ranks as one of the largest debut corporate bond sales on record. Demand was so strong that orders approached $90 billion, nearly quadrupling the company’s original $20 billion target and allowing it to upsize the offering by $5 billion.
The deal spanned five tranches with maturities stretching from 2031 to 2056. The structure included $7 billion of 5.350% notes due 2031, $6 billion of 5.650% notes due 2033, $6 billion of 5.875% notes due 2036, $2.5 billion of 6.600% notes due 2046, and $3.5 billion of 6.650% notes due 2056.
Where the Money Goes
SpaceX said it intends to use the proceeds first to repay borrowings under its bridge loan facility in full, with any remainder going toward general corporate purposes. The repayment cleans up financing that had bridged the company’s capital needs ahead of its public debut.
The fundraising comes as SpaceX presses ahead with an array of capital-intensive projects. For instance, the company is expanding its Starlink satellite internet business, developing its Starship rocket program, and pursuing a broader artificial-intelligence buildout, each of which demands sustained investment.
By tapping the bond market so soon after going public, SpaceX has signaled it intends to use its new status to raise long-dated, lower-cost capital at scale rather than relying solely on equity.
From IPO to Bond Market
The bond sale followed a record IPO on June 12, one of the most closely watched market events of the year. The listing rippled well beyond equities with Bitcoin.com News reporting that prediction-market trading hit a record $10.8 billion week as the SpaceX IPO, the World Cup, and other events drove a surge in speculative volume.
Prediction platforms, too, saw simultaneous demand across finance, geopolitics, and sports, with SpaceX listed among the key catalysts.
For traditional fixed-income investors, the takeaway has been simple. A first-time issuer attracting near-$90 billion in orders points to deep confidence in SpaceX’s balance sheet and growth trajectory, even at the long end of the maturity curve.
With its bridge loan set to be repaid and fresh long-term funding secured, SpaceX has locked in capital to push its many ambitions through the rest of the decade. The size and reception of the debut deal also establish the company as a recurring presence in debt markets.
In the near term, investors will watch how quickly SpaceX deploys the proceeds and whether it returns to the bond market for future rounds.