The biggest IPO in history is officially happening. SpaceX has publicly filed its S-1 registration with the US SEC and is expected to debut around mid-June.
• Elon Musk will continue as CEO, CTO, and Chairman after the IPO
• Target valuation: $1.75 trillion to $2 trillion
• The company plans to raise around $75–80 billion, far bigger than Saudi Aramco’s previous record of $29.4 billion
• Cash on hand stood at $15.8 billion as of March 31
• SpaceX reported Q1 2026 revenue of $4.69 billion
Something different:
In most large IPOs, retail investors usually get only 5–10% of the shares, with the majority going to big institutions like hedge funds and pension funds. However, reports say Elon Musk requested an unusual 30% allocation for retail investors so individual supporters can participate more.
Even after the IPO, Elon Musk is expected to retain major voting 85% control despite owning a smaller percentage of the company’s actual equity. This means public investors can benefit if the stock rises, but they will have very little say in major company decisions like leadership changes or strategy.
Having a hard FOMO now ![]()
