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#SpaceXSecretlyFilesForIPO
On April 2, 2026, Elon Musk's SpaceX submitted a confidential draft registration statement, commonly referred to as a confidential S-1, to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. The move was first reported by Bloomberg and quickly confirmed by CNBC, Reuters, and The Wall Street Journal, each citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter. SpaceX itself has made no official public statement, which is entirely consistent with the nature of a confidential filing.
A confidential filing is a legal mechanism available to certain companies under the JOBS Act, which allows them to submit their S-1 prospectus to the SEC privately. Regulators then review and respond to the company before any of the financial details become visible to the public. The company is only required to release the full public version of its prospectus a minimum of 15 days before it begins its investor roadshow. This means that critical financial disclosures, including Starlink's subscriber revenue breakdown, the ongoing cash burn of the Starship development program, and the detailed corporate structure following SpaceX's absorption of xAI, will remain undisclosed until that public window opens.
The headline figure making rounds across financial media is a target valuation of approximately 1.75 trillion dollars. For context, that would place SpaceX above Saudi Aramco's 2019 debut, which raised roughly 29.4 billion dollars and valued the oil giant at around 1.7 trillion dollars at the time of listing. If SpaceX prices its offering near that target, it would be the largest initial public offering in recorded financial history. Reports suggest the company is aiming to raise somewhere between 40 and 75 billion dollars from the public offering, though the final figure will not be set until a few weeks before the actual listing date.
The company is reportedly targeting a listing as early as June or July 2026, though that timeline remains contingent on how smoothly the SEC review process proceeds, prevailing market conditions, and internal decisions around final pricing and structure.
Much of the 1.75 trillion dollar valuation is anchored in Starlink, SpaceX's satellite internet division. By the end of 2025, Starlink had grown to approximately 9.2 million paying subscribers across more than 100 countries. The division has become the dominant revenue engine for the broader company, transforming SpaceX from a launch services provide