The S-1 filing confirms a strategic pivot: SpaceX is no longer a rocket company; it is an AI and compute infrastructure play. By framing its $28.5 trillion TAM primarily around AI, the company is forcing public market investors to re-evaluate how they value vertically integrated hardware-software stacks.
SpaceX officially filed its S-1 with the SEC to list on the Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX. Seeking to raise between $40 billion and $80 billion, the company is aiming for a valuation between $1.75 trillion and $2 trillion. The filing details significant financial losses, including $4.9 billion in 2025 and $4.28 billion in Q1 2026, driven largely by capital-intensive AI infrastructure build-outs and the integration of xAI.
Why It Matters
The market is being asked to price a company that combines high-frequency launch logistics with massive data center deployment. With Starlink accounting for 61% of 2025 revenue ($11.4 billion), the company has successfully de-risked its core business to fund its transition into a global compute provider. By indexing its growth to a $26.5 trillion AI addressable market, SpaceX is pivoting away from the slower-moving aerospace sector toward the exponential growth cycles of high-performance computing.
This sets a new precedent for how ‘deep tech’ companies structure their equity narratives. By tying executive compensation to extreme milestonesโincluding the colonization of Mars and non-Earth-based data centersโthe company is signaling a long-term shift toward a planetary-scale infrastructure moat that traditional aerospace competitors cannot replicate.
Investors should note that the IPO window for this scale is rare; if successful, this will absorb massive liquidity from the public markets, likely tightening capital availability for late-stage private AI and aerospace ventures over the next 18 months.
The Numbers
- $28.5T Total Addressable Market (TAM), with $26.5T attributed to AI.
- $18.7B total revenue in 2025; $11.4B derived from Starlink.
- $4.28B net loss in Q1 2026 due to aggressive AI infrastructure spending.
- 85.1% voting power held by Elon Musk via Class B shares.
What To Watch
- Liquidity Pull: Monitor how a potential $80B raise impacts the broader tech IPO pipeline in Q3 and Q4 2026.
- Compute Revenue: Watch for the revenue impact of the Anthropic partnership as a proxy for SpaceXโs ability to monetize non-aerospace compute.
- Governance Tensions: Observe institutional investor reactions to the extreme concentration of voting power and the Mars-linked compensation structure.