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SpaceX aims for $800 billion valuation in secondary share sale, WSJ reports

CNBCDecember 06, 2025 at 12:20 AMFull Content
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Gist

SpaceX is planning a secondary share sale aiming for an $800 billion valuation and may go public by late 2026, according to The Wall Street Journal.

LLM Summary

SpaceX is exploring a secondary share sale that could value the company at up to $800 billion, potentially leading to an IPO as early as late 2026. The move comes amid Musk's renewed interest in public listing despite concerns about regulatory scrutiny and operational challenges. SpaceX's Starlink satellite network and heavy investment in reusable rockets are key drivers of its valuation.

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Key Points

* SpaceX is aiming to launch a secondary share sale that would value the company at up to $800 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal.

* The report also said the company may look to go public as soon as late 2026.

* Elon Musk, who is CEO of both SpaceX and automaker Tesla, said in November he would consider taking SpaceX public even though he sees potential downsides.

Elon Musk's SpaceX, is initiating a secondary share sale that would give the company a valuation of up to $800 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

SpaceX is also telling some investors it will consider going public possibly around the end of next year, the report said.

At the elevated price, Musk's aerospace and defense contractor would be valued above ChatGPT maker OpenAI, which wrapped up a share sale at a $500 billion valuation in October.

SpaceX has been investing heavily in reusable rockets, launch facilities and satellites, while competing for government contracts with newer space players, including Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin. SpaceX is far ahead, and operates the world's largest network of satellites in low earth orbit through Starlink, which powers satellite internet services under the same brand name.

A SpaceX IPO would include its Starlink business, which the company previously considered spinning out.

Musk recently discussed whether SpaceX would go public during Tesla's annual shareholders meeting last month. Musk, who is the CEO of both companies, said he doesn't love running publicly traded businesses, in part because they draw "spurious lawsuits," and can "make it very difficult to operate effectively."

However, Musk said during the meeting that he wanted to "try to figure out some way for Tesla shareholders to participate in SpaceX," adding, "maybe at some point, SpaceX should become a public company despite all the downsides."