SpaceX could raise up to $75 billion, begin marketing next week and list under SPCX, while its revenue rose to $18.7 billion even as it swung to a $4.94 billion loss

SpaceX eyes the largest IPO ever at up to $2 trillion valuation. Nasdaq reportedly plans rule changes to fast-track Nasdaq-100 inclusion within 15 trading days.

SpaceX plans to raise up to $75B in its IPO at a $2T valuation, eclipsing Saudi Aramco's record. Trading could begin mid-June 2026 on Nasdaq.

⏳ Reading Time: 6 minutesLong before a human being sets foot on Mars, the world will have produced its first trillionaire. On 12 June, under the ticker SPCX on the Nasdaq, SpaceX…

SpaceX is currently targeting a valuation of at least $1.8 trillion in its initial public offering, according to people familiar with the matter. Bloomberg News reported in April…

Elon Musk's space and AI company reportedly aims to raise $75 billion.

The rocket, data and artificial intelligence firm’s target is settling lower after aiming for a valuation above $2 trillion following consultations with advisers and investors,…

Bloomberg News reported in April that SpaceX was aiming for a valuation above $2 trillion. The target is settling lower after consultations with advisers and investors, the people…

SpaceX cuts its IPO valuation target from $2T+ to at least $1.8T. Marketing begins 4 June, pricing as early as 11 June. Revenue $18.7B in 2025, loss of $4.94B.

SpaceX has revised its IPO valuation target to at least $1.8 trillion, down from its earlier goal of over $2 trillion after consulting advisers and investors.

SpaceX cuts its IPO valuation target to $1.8 trillion from $2 trillion ahead of planned June launch, per Bloomberg report.

The rocket and AI company had previously targeted a valuation above $2 trillion, according to Bloomberg

"The target is settling lower after consultations with advisers and investors..."

SpaceX could raise up to $75 billion, begin marketing next week and list under SPCX, while its revenue rose to $18.7 billion even as it swung to a $4.94 billion loss