ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

SpaceX by the numbers: Six charts mapping businesses driving its IPO ambitions

SpaceX by the numbers: Six charts mapping businesses driving its IPO ambitions

By Anhata Rooprai and Jaspreet SinghThu, June 11, 2026 at 10:05 AM UTC

0

FILE PHOTO: SpaceX's Starship rocket prototypes are seen at the SpaceX Starbase in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., August 19, 2023. REUTERS/Veronica G. Cardenas./File Photo

By Anhata Rooprai and Jaspreet Singh

June 11 (Reuters) - SpaceX's market debut on Friday is expected to be the largest-ever IPO, capping the meteoric rise of a company that has reshaped the space business with reusable rockets and internet beamed from orbit and ‌which now targets space-based AI.

Aiming for a $1.75 trillion valuation that would instantly rank it among the world's most valuable companies, SpaceX is ‌pitching itself as humanity's ticket to Mars.

Its financials, though, show a company whose aggressive spending on computing power for AI and developing a new rocket has overwhelmed the profits from its ​Starlink satellite internet service.

Here are six charts that illustrate its business:

Last year, SpaceX's sales rose 33% to $18.67 billion, with Starlink accounting for about 60% of the total thanks to its about 10.3 million users across 9,600 satellites.

But merging with the money-losing xAI pushed the company to a net loss of $4.94 billion last year, from a profit of $791 million in 2024, when the explosive growth of Starlink and its reusable rocket launch business powered earnings.

SPACEX'S LAUNCH ‌CADENCE SETS IT APART FROM RIVALS

SpaceX has gone from ⁠a single launch in 2006 to more than two every week, far outpacing rivals and making it the go-to launch partner for NASA and the Pentagon.

Its reusable Falcon 9 has powered that surge, while the larger, still-in-development Starship is ⁠intended to carry crew and cargo on an unprecedented scale.

Falcon Heavy essentially combines three Falcon 9 boosters to form one of the world's most powerful rockets. It is capable of lifting 64 metric tons to low-Earth orbit and currently launches heavy military satellites and interplanetary probes.

Advertisement

XAI TRAILS AI RIVALS ANTHROPIC, OPENAI

SpaceX's biggest addressable market, it says, ​is ​AI. In February, SpaceX acquired xAI and united two key parts of Musk's business ​empire. But by many measures, xAI is behind rivals Anthropic ‌and OpenAI.

A recent report from finance startup Ramp showed that more than 30% of its business customers were paying for Anthropic's and OpenAI's AI services in April, with the Claude Code creator overtaking OpenAI for the first time, while xAI's adoption remained around 5%.

The data — based on Ramp's analysis of spending by about 50,000 customers — only captures a small slice of spending by big enterprises on AI, an area where Anthropic is believed to be the market leader.

Investors in the SpaceX IPO are being asked to pay a premium that dwarfs the multiples at ‌which some of the most valuable tech companies trade. At $135 per share, SpaceX would trade ​at a trailing price-to-sales multiple of roughly 94 — above companies such as Nvidia, Amazon and ​Meta and closer to pure-play space peers such as Planet Labs ​and Rocket Lab, which trade at 50.4 and 115.4, respectively, despite being younger companies.

Since SpaceX generated a loss last ‌year, it cannot be compared on a price-to-earnings ratio.

STARSHIP WILL ​LIFT SPACEX'S LAUNCH CAPACITY

The case for that ​premium rests partly on Starship, which is designed to be reusable and carry over 100 metric tons to low-Earth orbit, more than any other rocket flying today. This would be crucial not just to SpaceX's launch business but also to its ambitions to put AI data ​centers in orbit.

Current SpaceX rockets, Falcon 9 and Falcon ‌Heavy, can carry about 22.8 metric tons and 63.8 metric tons to low-Earth orbit, respectively.

The Starship's test flight in May marked ​a major milestone ahead of the IPO, successfully deploying mock satellites and completing a controlled Indian Ocean splashdown despite minor engine ​issues.

(Reporting by Anhata Rooprai and Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Money”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.