Counting down to the Space X Launch
Thomas Shipp | Head of Equity ResearchJune 02, 2026
Additional content provided by Tucker Beale, Sr. Analyst, Research.
Interest in the IPO space has skyrocketed in the lead up to the public listing of SpaceX. And for good reason. SpaceX is looking to raise as much as $75 billion in what is expected to be the largest IPO ever, with a projected valuation range of $1.75 trillion to north of $2 trillion. Today we will cover what the company does, what it intends to do, and our key takeaways from the watershed S-1 filing.
SpaceX’s mission is to “build the systems and technologies necessary to make life multiplanetary, to understand the true nature of the universe, and to extend the light of consciousness to the stars.” Those lofty ambitions currently manifest as three businesses: Reusable rockets for space travel, Starlink for connectivity, and xAI’s Grok “truth seeking” frontier AI model (with access to the social media platform X for training data).
Along with serving their existing markets, these three business lines have the combined goal of starting to deploy orbital AI compute satellites working as data centers in space as early as 2028. By lowering the cost of transportation to orbit and leveraging expertise gained by managing the existing constellation of Starlink satellites, SpaceX looks to sidestep existing power bottlenecks restraining the AI race with a solar powered network of satellites. SpaceX management believes AI leadership will be defined by vertical integration of infrastructure and application. In other words, the ability to rapidly scale capacity to support exponential usage growth and frontier intelligence, supported by the belief that more computational resources lead to higher-quality intelligence. Management’s focus on this goal is outlined in their total addressable market (TAM) projections, which skew heavily towards AI enterprise applications powered by AI satellites and mirrors the estimated total market for knowledge work.
SpaceX’s Estimated TAM by Segment

Source: sec.gov 5/26/2026
Aiming to achieve something that has never been done on a scale never seen by leveraging technology that does not currently exist, comes with some risks. Known risks outlined by SpaceX include needing to increase launch cadence and payload capacity, which is dependent on the successful development of the newest “Starship” rocket at scale.
Other key risks include potential regulatory changes, customer concentration (~20% of 2025 revenue came from the U.S. government), integration of the newly acquired xAI business, costs associated with the development of AI capabilities, potential delays associated with development of new technologies, potential conflicts of interest between SpaceX and other entities owned by or affiliated with Elon Musk, and key person risk.
SpaceX is very much tied to the success of Elon Musk as he is the chief executive officer (CEO), chief technical officer (CTO), and chairman of the board. Musk has complete control of the company and per the S-1 filing, his “leadership, vision, and expertise are critical to the development of our technologies and the execution of our business strategy.” To incentivize execution on key initiatives, the company has granted the founder two batches of performance-based restricted shares so far in 2026. The performance milestones in the first batch of shares include the company achieving certain market capitalization levels and establishing a permanent human colony on Mars with at least one million inhabitants. The second batch has similar market cap milestones, but vest should the company create non-Earth-based data centers capable of delivering 100 terawatts of compute per year. Additionally, SpaceX does not maintain key-person life insurance on Elon Musk.
All of this adds up to a future-focused company with no shortage of opportunities and risks whose size, profitability, and ambitious timelines set it up for a potentially volatile introduction to public markets. We are intrigued by what SpaceX may accomplish in terms of extending humanity’s reach into the cosmos, but an ambitious mission on its own does not necessarily make for a sound company and there are a lot of hopes and dreams baked into the business plan. To SpaceX’s credit, many of these known risks are outlined nicely in the S-1 filing. The world needs ambitious companies pushing the boundaries of what is possible, but the ride between here and the stars may be too turbulent for some.
Disclosure: LPL Financial does not offer access to or purchase of Initial Public Offerings (IPOs)
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Articles and Assets
What are your Priorities?
Well it’s the end of the year. I just searched on Google for “market outlook 2018.” I came up with a little over 58-million “results.”
So should you be investing in stocks in 2018? The quick answer: It’s likely a prudent part of your portfolio. But it depends on your circumstances, right?
It’s apparently popular to throw your hat in the ring.
A mantra that you hear among disciplined professionals is to “stay the course.”
Then you hear “sell high, buy low.”
Who’s right?
The relief of a disciplined strategy is that it can be tailored to you. And tailor we think you should.
Yes, it’s possible that an investor may not utilize stocks in their portfolio at all. Or you may decide to go “all in” with a diversified stock portfolio.
(Side effects from tailoring a strategy may include increased confidence & persistence, apathy toward daily market reports, and increased focus on what really matters.)
Let’s begin with the “Why” of investing for you. Then you can request 15-minutes on the phone discuss your “how.”
So “Why Should You Invest”
Life changes and our “why” of investing ought to transform with life. Some invest for sport – they like the risk/reward of investing – they’re in it for the thrill. I don’t hang with this crowd.
Most of us ought to invest for things we want. Our money & our goals are serious. By investing in a diversified portfolio we can pursue things we want.
1. Living A Comfortable Retirement: Retirement is a noun. It’s up to you to really design and live a retirement that reflects you.
2. Purchasing a Home: Home is a place to live. It can take a down payment.
3. Passing an Inheritance on to Family:
4. Student Loan Shield: This idea is important for many Millennial graduates. Student loans can dominate your budget. But instead of accelerating those payments, what if you paid your required payments, and then invested the additional money that you were going to pay against your loan balance?
5. Emergency Reserves: You probably have read that it’s prudent to keep a relative healthy amount of cash in your checking/savings. Once you’ve achieved that, then you can consider investing additional funds. Go a step further and consider a non-retirement account for you and your house. You can spend this on cars, vacations or use it just as described in #4.
The Dow Jones has seen positive results, so far, in 2017. It’s unusual and sort of uncomfortable as the independent financial advisor. Why is it uncomfortable?
What would sting & linger longer? Finding $20 in the parking lot? Or finding a $20 parking fine on your windshield?
We’ve been finding a lot of metaphorical “$20’s” (i.e. “positive results”) in our portfolios this year. So the second we find a parking fine (or a few in a row) we’ll be sure to ask if stocks are still the right place to park our money.
Complacency can work against us, Dear Clients. Just keep recalling your long-haul strategy and your “why” of investing.
***
Peter Mullin is an independent financial advisor registered through LPL Financial. He lives in Rogers, MN with his family. He was born and raised in St. Cloud, MN. Mullin Wealth Management is located in Waite Park, MN.
The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual.
Investing involves risk including loss of principal.
There is no guarantee that a diversified portfolio will enhance overall returns or outperform a non-diversified portfolio. Diversification does not protect against market risk.
All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results.
All indices are unmanaged and may not be invested into directly. No strategy assures success or protects against loss.




