Starlink has been the main driver of growth, bringing in about sixty percent of last year’s revenue. With over ten million subscribers, Starlink generated most of the company’s eighteen point seven billion dollars in 2025 revenue. While the business is expanding rapidly, it’s still losing money — roughly four point nine billion dollars last year — due to heavy investments in Starship, space-based AI infrastructure, and global expansion.
Elon Musk will maintain strong control after the IPO, holding around eighty-five percent of the voting power through supervoting shares. That means even as a public company, decisions will stay firmly in his hands.
Retail investors actually have a good chance to buy shares at the IPO price. Major brokers including Robinhood, Fidelity, Charles Schwab, SoFi, and E-TRADE are expected to offer access. You’ll need to log in, go to the IPO section, and submit an indication of interest during the offering period. Demand will be extremely high, so you probably won’t get your full requested amount. If you miss out, you can buy shares on the open market once trading begins under ticker SPCX.
Investing at this sky-high valuation comes with real risks. The company remains unprofitable and faces massive execution challenges ahead. Whether you’re bullish on Starlink’s future, Mars colonization, or orbital data centers, you’ll need strong conviction to ride out the likely volatility.
That’s the core of the SpaceX IPO story.
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