Context
SpaceX has been discussed in public markets media as eyeing a valuation of $1.75 trillion for a potential IPO, a figure reported by Bloomberg on March 25, 2026 (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026). That headline number is attention-grabbing because it would place the company among the largest public listings in history, roughly on par with Saudi Aramco’s $1.7 trillion valuation at its December 2019 listing (Aramco IPO, Dec 2019). For institutional investors, the critical issue is not the headline alone but the set of operational and financial assumptions required to justify such a valuation: growth rates, margin sustainability, capital intensity and regulatory risk over a multi-year horizon.
The last decade has conditioned markets to accept nine-figure and 12-figure valuations for companies that promise structural change. Apple first crossed the $1 trillion market-cap threshold on August 2, 2018, an event that shifted investor expectations for what 'mega-cap' could mean (Market data, Aug 2, 2018). But space and satellite businesses have historically traded at much lower multiples because of capital expenditure cycles and long revenue ramp periods. The contrast between narrative-driven valuations in software and the capital intensity of aerospace is central to assessing a $1.75 trillion pitch.
This discussion also matters for secondary effects across supply chains and peers. A SpaceX IPO at that valuation would reset comparables for satellite communications players, launch-service firms and defence contractors with space divisions. In addition, it would pose governance and market-structure questions: what entity is intended for listing (SpaceX parent, Starlink unit, or a combination), what lock-up or founder ownership structures will apply, and how public-market investors will price liquidity vs. control.
Finally, market timing is not neutral. Bloomberg’s report surfaced on March 25, 2026; global equity markets in the first quarter of 2026 have shown periodic risk-off pulses that compress multiples on growth-exposed, capital-intensive names. Any IPO execution will therefore intersect with ephemeral market conditions as well as the long-term technical and regulatory trends discussed below.
Data Deep Dive
Three tangible data points anchor the valuation debate. First, the $1.75 trillion figure reported by Bloomberg (Mar 25, 2026) is comparable to Aramco’s approximately $1.7 trillion valuation at IPO in December 2019, a rare precedent for an industrial-scale listing (Aramco IPO, Dec 2019). Second, the historical milestone for large-cap psychology is Apple crossing $1 trillion on August 2, 2018—seven and a half years before Bloomberg’s SpaceX piece noted the comparison (Market data, Aug 2, 2018; Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026). Third, the implied revenue and profit trajectory can be modeled: at a 20x revenue multiple, a $1.75 trillion valuation implies about $87.5 billion of annual revenue; at a 10x multiple it implies $175 billion. Those simple calculations demonstrate the magnitude of underlying operating performance required to rationalize the headline valuation under conventional public-market multiple frameworks.
Public precedents are instructive. Saudi Aramco’s 2019 valuation reflected existing, highly predictable cash flow from commodity production; its multiple versus trailing revenue and earnings was materially lower than technology multiples because of the low-risk, capital-heavy commodity model. By contrast, SpaceX’s revenue base as a private company is less transparent, and Starlink—a crucial component of any high multiple thesis—has historically been a high-growth but capital-consuming business. Outside investors must therefore convert headline valuation into plausible growth and margin trajectories, and test sensitivity to capex cycles and churn.
Another numerical lens is capital intensity. If a sizeable portion of SpaceX’s value is attributable to Starlink recurring revenue, investor payoff depends on ARPU (average revenue per user), subscriber growth, churn, and the ongoing cost of deploying and refreshing a global user-terminal fleet. Even modest changes in ARPU or terminal cost trajectory can alter discounted cash flows materially. For example, a 10% decline in long-run ARPU assumptions could translate into double-digit percentage reductions in a DCF-based valuation for a satellite-communications business, all else equal. Given the opacity of private-company metrics, institutional investors will demand rigorous disclosure on unit economics and capex schedules.
Sector Implications
An IPO at a $1.75 trillion valuation would have immediate signalling effects across aerospace and adjacent sectors. For satellite and telecom peers, it could lift forward expectations for addressable market size for low-earth-orbit (LEO) connectivity, potentially compressing yields on growth forecasts and raising acquisition price expectations for later-stage M&A. For launch-service providers and component suppliers, it could redirect capital into manufacturing scale-ups—where lead times are multi-year and working-capital needs are material. The practical consequence would be a reallocation of private capital toward upstream suppliers, where margins are typically lower and execution risk higher than for software.
From a public-market comparative standpoint, a SpaceX listing at $1.75 trillion would make it larger than nearly all aerospace and defense primes combined on current groupings; it would also create a new peer group that blends industrial-scale manufacturing with recurring-service economics. That hybrid profile is unusual and complicates benchmarking: do investors compare SpaceX to telcos and cloud providers on ARR-like metrics, or to industrial manufacturers on asset turnover and capital returns? The choice of comparators will materially influence accepted multiples.
There are secondary regulatory and policy implications. National security reviews, export controls on satellites and ground terminals, spectrum allocation processes and potential subsidy regimes for rural connectivity can all alter the risk-adjusted revenue stream. A high-profile listing would draw additional scrutiny from regulators in multiple jurisdictions, and any protracted engagement could introduce execution risk into the public-market timetable. Institutional investors will therefore weigh the likely timeline for regulatory approvals alongside market dynamics.
Risk Assessment
Valuation on the order of $1.75 trillion embeds several execution risks. Foremost is the capital cycle: satellite constellations require upfront spend on manufacturing, launches and user terminals before realizing stable recurring revenue. If capital costs remain elevated or launch cadence falters, margin and free-cash-flow projections underpinning high multiples will deteriorate. Historical examples in capital-intensive communications (e.g., the commercial satellite industry cycles of the 2000s) show how lumpy cash flows and technology re-spins can compress investor returns.
Competitive risk is also material. While SpaceX has generated first-mover advantages in reusable launch and in scaling Starlink deployments, competitors (regional LEO initiatives, terrestrial wireless entrants, and government-backed alternatives) could pressure pricing or market share. Pricing competition would be particularly painful if user acquisition assumes premium ARPU and low churn. Institutional investors will seek clarity on customer cohorts (residential, enterprise, government) and willingness-to-pay elasticities across those segments.
Governance and capital-allocation risk should not be understated. A large founder ownership stake or dual-class control structure can be tolerated when growth is robust and disclosure is strong; it becomes problematic if transparency is limited and insider alignment unclear. Additionally, the mechanics of an IPO—whether it is a primary raise, a sell-down of existing shares, or a spin-off of a unit like Starlink—will have distinct balance-sheet and cash-flow implications for new public shareholders.
Outlook
Several plausible issuance pathways exist. One is a consolidated IPO of the SpaceX parent, which would package launch, manufacturing and Starlink together. Another is a carved-out listing of Starlink as a pure-play communications operator; that route could attract telco comparables and a different investor base. The Bloomberg article (Mar 25, 2026) did not confirm the structure, and each pathway carries distinct valuation anchors. A parental listing emphasizes optionality but complicates financial modelling; a unit listing improves transparency but may leave the parent with concentrated industrial risk.
Market appetite is the final variable. IPO windows for mega-listings depend on macro liquidity, risk appetite and demand from long-only and allocators seeking growth duration. Historical timing is instructive: Aramco listed in December 2019 when oil-price and state-directed placement conditions aligned; Apple’s $1 trillion milestone occurred within a multi-year secular growth narrative. For SpaceX, the interplay between investor risk tolerance for capital intensity and appetite for narrative growth will determine achievable pricing.
For institutional investors considering participation, the checklist will include clear disclosure on Starlink ARPU and churn, capex-to-revenue phasing, margins by business line, and governance arrangements. Given the scale implied by $1.75 trillion, investors should expect unusually detailed operational KPIs and robust lock-up and shareholder-protection mechanics to emerge in offering documents.
Fazen Capital Perspective
From Fazen Capital’s vantage point, the $1.75 trillion figure is as much a reflection of market narrative as it is of underlying cash flows. Our contrarian read is that the market may be willing to pay a premium for unique asset ecosystems led by founder-CEOs—especially when they combine capital-intensity with recurring-revenue optionality—but only if public disclosure resolves unit economics on a granular basis. The headline valuation therefore overstates the degree to which optionality alone can be monetized absent predictable near-term cash generation.
We also see a realistic pathway in which public-market investors value Starlink as a differentiated telecom asset while treating the launch and manufacturing business as a lower-multiple industrial. That separability would likely lower consolidated multiples versus a single unified $1.75T price, particularly if the market prizes recurring revenue streams that convert quickly to free cash flow. This suggests that a carve-out strategy—whether voluntary or market-driven—could unlock better valuation transparency and reduce execution risk for long-term holders.
Finally, institutional allocations should focus on downside protection and scenario analysis rather than headline upside. Stress-testing valuations across ARPU, capex, and churn assumptions will be decisive: modest adjustments to key inputs yield substantial valuation movement at the scales under discussion. We recommend that allocators demand standardized metrics in prospectuses and consider tranche-based exposure that ties valuation to milestone delivery rather than purely to narrative expectations. For further perspectives on tech and IPO readiness, see our [insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [market analyses](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
A $1.75 trillion price tag for SpaceX would be transformative and requires high-conviction public disclosures on revenue, margins and capex. Investors should demand scenario-based, unit-level metrics to translate narrative optionality into investable expectations.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: Could SpaceX list Starlink separately and would that change valuation?
A: Yes, a Starlink carve-out is an actionable route and would likely attract telco and communications investors who price recurring revenue differently from capital-intensive manufacturing. A separate listing could compress the implied multiple for the launch/manufacturing business while increasing transparency and investor choice for Starlink’s revenue profile.
Q: How would a $1.75T valuation compare historically to mega-IPOs?
A: A $1.75 trillion valuation would rank with the largest in history, slightly above Saudi Aramco’s ~ $1.7 trillion valuation at its December 2019 listing (Aramco IPO, Dec 2019) and well above the $1 trillion milestone Apple crossed on August 2, 2018 (Market data, Aug 2, 2018). The key difference is that Aramco’s valuation reflected predictable commodity cash flows, whereas SpaceX’s would rest on future growth and capital deployment assumptions.
Q: What practical data should institutional investors request pre-IPO?
A: Beyond top-line forecasts, investors should request detailed ARPU by customer cohort, churn rates, terminal-cost curves, launch cadence schedules, capital-expenditure phasing, and segment-level margins. These metrics allow stress-testing of the multiple scenarios and provide the transparency needed to bridge private-market narratives and public-market valuation disciplines.
