In what is being called the most significant financial event in tech history, SpaceX officially priced its initial public offering (IPO) at $135 per share on Thursday, June 11, 2026raising a staggering $75 billion and cementing its place as the largest IPO ever recorded in the United States. The milestone simultaneously made Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire, according to multiple financial analysts and Reuters reporting.
The Biggest IPO in History
SpaceX’s market debut on Friday, June 12, 2026 marks a watershed moment not just for the aerospace industry, but for the entire technology sector. The company, which operates the Starlink satellite internet constellation and the Falcon 9 and Starship rocket programs, priced its shares at $135 a figure that values the company at well over half a trillion dollars. Investment bank Oppenheimer became the first global brokerage to initiate coverage of SpaceX ahead of the IPO, issuing a bullish outlook on the company’s long-term prospects.
The IPO has attracted enormous attention from institutional and retail investors alike. Bidding was described by market analysts as being “driven by hype” as well as genuine confidence in SpaceX’s dual revenue streams: its commercial launch business and the rapidly expanding Starlink broadband service, which now serves tens of millions of subscribers globally.
Musk Becomes the World’s First Trillionaire
With SpaceX’s valuation soaring post-IPO, Elon Musk’s net worth has crossed the $1 trillion threshold, making him the first individual in recorded history to achieve trillionaire status. Musk’s wealth is spread across SpaceX, Tesla, xAI, and other ventures, but the SpaceX IPO provided the decisive boost. The milestone has reignited global conversations about wealth inequality, the concentration of power in tech, and the role of private space companies in shaping humanity’s future.
Controversy and Legal Challenges
The IPO has not been without controversy. Several U.S. states have filed legal challenges against Nasdaq and FTSE Russell for fast-tracking SpaceX’s inclusion in major indices, arguing that the process bypassed standard regulatory review. Additionally, SpaceX’s SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle) investors have been warned they won’t know their true holdings until post-IPO lock-up periods expire a detail that has raised eyebrows among smaller investors who participated in earlier funding rounds.
What This Means for the Tech Industry
SpaceX’s IPO is expected to trigger a broader wave of mega-IPOs in the tech and aerospace sectors. Quantum Space, a military-focused space startup, has already announced a SPAC deal in an attempt to ride the momentum. Google has separately announced a deal to pay SpaceX $920 million per month for compute infrastructure tied to Starlink’s satellite network a deal that underscores how deeply SpaceX has embedded itself into the broader tech ecosystem.
For investors and tech watchers, SpaceX’s public debut represents a new era: one where private space companies are not just scientific endeavors, but trillion-dollar commercial enterprises reshaping global communications, defense, and beyond.
Key Takeaways
- SpaceX IPO priced at $135/share, raising $75 billion the largest IPO in U.S. history
- Elon Musk becomes the world’s first trillionaire
- Google paying SpaceX $920M/month for compute infrastructure
- Legal challenges filed by states over fast-tracked index inclusion
- Expected to trigger a new wave of tech and aerospace IPOs
For quality tech news, professional analysis, insights, and the latest updates on technology, follow TechTrib.com. Stay connected and join our fast-growing community.
TechTrib.com is a leading technology news platform providing comprehensive coverage and analysis of tech news, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and emerging technology. Visit techtrib.com.
Contact Information: Email: news@techtrib.com or for adverts placement adverts@techtrib.com