Good morning. There’s nothing like space, our “final frontier,” to fire up the imagination. And all eyes were pointed to the heavens on Wednesday as NASA’s Artemis II mission blasted off on its journey to the Moon, and Elon Musk’s rocket company
SpaceX filed paperwork for what’s expected to be the largest IPO ever (more on that below).
For all the excitement and the fun timing, it’s an odd juxtaposition. The grand vision justifying SpaceX’s potential $1.75 trillion valuation—a number beyond the stratosphere of any previous IPO—involves human colonies on Mars and lunar data centers. And yet, the celebrated space mission that left Earth on Wednesday won’t even land astronauts on the Moon—a feat we first accomplished more than half a century ago, but have not repeated in decades.
SpaceX is itself carrying all sorts of unusual cargo on its journey to the public markets, including xAI—Musk’s generative AI company—and X, the social media platform formerly known as
Twitter, which Musk acquired for $44 billion in 2022. How any of these disparate pieces of the company fit together is anyone’s guess. And we won’t have a better understanding of it for some time, since SpaceX filed the draft of its IPO prospectus to the SEC confidentially (remember when confidential filings were reserved for “emerging growth” companies?). Ultimately, it may not even matter. A bet on SpaceX is a bet on Musk. And to judge by all the capital he’s already raised in the private markets, investors are not afraid to take a ride on his rocketship, wherever it’s heading.
Today’s news below.
Alexei Oreskovic
@lexnfx
alexei.oreskovic@fortune.com
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