• SpaceX (SPCX) closed at $160.95 on Nasdaq debut — up +19.22% from $135 IPO price
• Intraday high: $176.52; after-hours: $167.57
• Market cap at close: $2.1 trillion — #7 globally, ahead of Tesla, Saudi Aramco, Broadcom
• IPO raised $75 billion across 555.6 million shares — largest IPO in history
• Musk net worth: $1.1 trillion+ (Forbes real-time) — first trillionaire in recorded history
Source: Nasdaq Newsroom | Published: June 13, 2026 | Category: SpaceX / Finance
The Day the Number Became Real
On June 12, 2026, SpaceX opened on the Nasdaq at $150 per share — 11% above its $135 IPO price — and never looked back. By the close of regular trading, SPCX had reached $160.95, a first-day gain of 19.22%. After-hours trading pushed it further to $167.57. The implied market capitalization: $2.1 trillion.
At that valuation, SpaceX became the seventh-largest publicly traded company on earth, surpassing Tesla, Saudi Aramco, and Broadcom in a single session. Elon Musk, holding approximately 42% of SpaceX equity and 85% of its voting rights, saw his combined net worth — SpaceX stake plus Tesla holdings plus other assets — cross $1.1 trillion according to the Forbes real-time billionaire tracker. He is now, by any measure, the first trillionaire in recorded human history.
Musk rang the opening bell via video link from Starbase, Texas: "A company that started in a small warehouse in El Segundo, California, is now going public in the largest IPO in history. There are always problems on Earth we want to solve, and we are solving them… SpaceX's goal is to take humanity to the Moon, to Mars, and ultimately to the stars. Whoever you are, SpaceX wants to take you to the Moon, to Mars, and beyond."
1. The IPO by the Numbers
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Ticker | SPCX (Nasdaq) |
| IPO price | $135/share |
| Shares sold | 555.6 million |
| Capital raised | $75 billion — largest IPO in history |
| Open | $150.00 (+11%) |
| Intraday high | $176.52 |
| Close | $160.95 (+19.22%) |
| After-hours | $167.57 |
| Market cap at close | $2.1 trillion |
| Retail allocation | 30% of shares reserved for retail investors |
| Dual listing | Nasdaq (primary) + Nasdaq Texas (simultaneous) |
Historical Scale
| Rank | Company | Year | Capital Raised |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🥇 | SpaceX | 2026 | $75 billion |
| 🥈 | Saudi Aramco | 2019 | $25.6 billion |
| 🥉 | Alibaba | 2014 | $25.0 billion |
| — | Arm Holdings | 2023 | $4.9 billion |
SpaceX's $75 billion raise exceeds Saudi Aramco and Alibaba combined. It is 15 times larger than Arm's 2023 listing. No company in history has absorbed this volume of public capital in a single offering.
2. Why $2.1 Trillion: The Business Logic Behind the Valuation
A $2.1 trillion valuation demands a $2.1 trillion explanation. SpaceX's S-1 filing provided the financial foundation; the market's first-day response validated it. The company is no longer being priced as a rocket manufacturer. It is being priced as a vertically integrated space-and-AI infrastructure platform with three interlocking revenue engines.
Engine 1: Starlink — The Cash Machine
In 2025, SpaceX generated $18.7 billion in total revenue. Of that, Starlink contributed $11.4 billion — 61% of the total. Starlink's 2025 milestones included record subscriber growth and expanded global coverage, establishing it as the dominant global satellite internet provider with 500,000+ users across 100+ countries and 7,000+ satellites in orbit. At 50% year-on-year growth, Starlink's revenue trajectory alone justifies a significant portion of the valuation.
Engine 2: xAI + Colossus — The AI Infrastructure Play
SpaceX's acquisition of xAI merged rockets and artificial intelligence into a single corporate entity. The combined company now operates Colossus — a 300MW AI compute facility built in 120 days, housing 220,000 Nvidia GPUs. This is not a side project. It is the foundation of SpaceX's positioning as an AI infrastructure provider at hyperscale.
The commercial validation: SpaceX's $45 billion AI compute deal with Anthropic, structured at $1.25 billion per month in hosting contracts, demonstrates that the world's leading AI labs are willing to pay premium rates for SpaceX's compute capacity. This is recurring, high-margin revenue that scales with AI demand — one of the fastest-growing demand curves in the global economy.
As Gwynne Shotwell put it from Times Square on IPO day: "We are one hundred percent an emerging competitor in the new field of AI. We are builders — we build our own rockets, we build our own launch sites, and very soon we will be building data centers on the ground and in orbit. I think of SpaceX as an infrastructure company."
Engine 3: Orbital Data Centers — The Long Game
The FCC is advancing its review of SpaceX's plan to deploy up to one million satellites as orbital data centers — a category of infrastructure that has never existed at commercial scale. If realized, this would give SpaceX a monopoly on a new layer of global compute infrastructure: processing that happens in orbit, latency-optimized for global coverage, and physically inaccessible to terrestrial competitors.
3. The Q1 2026 Loss: Why the Market Didn't Care
SpaceX reported a $4.28 billion GAAP net loss in Q1 2026. On any other company, this would be a red flag. On SpaceX, the market treated it as a feature.
The loss is almost entirely attributable to the Colossus buildout and AI infrastructure investment — capital expenditure that is generating the $1.25 billion/month Anthropic contract and positioning SpaceX for the next decade of AI compute demand. Adjusted EBITDA — which strips out the depreciation and amortization of these investments — remains strongly positive. The market is pricing SpaceX on its revenue trajectory and infrastructure moat, not its current-period GAAP earnings.
| Financial Metric | 2025 Full Year |
|---|---|
| Total revenue | $18.7 billion |
| Starlink revenue | $11.4 billion (61% of total) |
| Starlink YoY growth | ~50% |
| Q1 2026 GAAP net loss | -$4.28 billion (Colossus buildout) |
4. Musk at $1.1 Trillion: What It Means
Musk holds approximately 42% of SpaceX equity. At the $2.1 trillion closing valuation, that stake alone is worth approximately $882 billion. Add his Tesla holdings (approximately $135 billion at current TSLA prices), xAI equity, and other assets, and the Forbes real-time tracker confirms his total net worth has crossed $1.1 trillion.
The milestone is not merely symbolic. Polymarket had been pricing in a high probability of Musk reaching trillionaire status on IPO day — and the market delivered. A trillionaire-scale fortune fundamentally changes the calculus of what private capital can accomplish, including the self-funded Mars colonization program that Musk has described as his terminal objective.
The wealth composition has also shifted structurally. Tesla — once the primary driver of Musk's net worth — now represents a minority of his total assets. The center of gravity has moved to SpaceX, and within SpaceX, to the AI and orbital infrastructure businesses that Shotwell described as the company's future identity.
5. Global Market Position: Where SpaceX Sits Now
| Rank | Company | Market Cap (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Apple | ~$3.3T |
| 2 | Nvidia | ~$3.2T |
| 3 | Microsoft | ~$3.1T |
| 4 | Alphabet (Google) | ~$2.5T |
| 5 | Amazon | ~$2.4T |
| 6 | Meta | ~$2.2T |
| 7 | SpaceX (SPCX) | ~$2.1T |
Key Takeaways
• SPCX close: $160.95 — +19.22% from $135 IPO price
• Market cap: $2.1 trillion — #7 globally, ahead of Tesla, Saudi Aramco, Broadcom
• Capital raised: $75 billion — largest IPO in history by a factor of 3×
• Musk net worth: $1.1 trillion+ — first trillionaire in recorded history
• Revenue engine: Starlink ($11.4B, 61% of 2025 revenue) + Colossus AI compute ($45B Anthropic deal) + orbital data centers
• The thesis: SpaceX is no longer a rocket company — it is a vertically integrated space-and-AI infrastructure monopoly
Source: Nasdaq Newsroom (June 12, 2026). Published June 13, 2026. Market cap and net worth figures reflect June 12 closing data. This article is for informational purposes only.