SpaceX Lists on NASDAQ at $135 Per Share, $1.77 Trillion Valuation in Historic Space Economy IPO
Summary: On June 12, 2026, SpaceX debuted on NASDAQ at an IPO price of $135 per share with a $1.77 trillion valuation, the largest IPO in space economy history, marking the formal arrival of the orbital economy era.
On June 12, 2026, SpaceX officially began trading on the NASDAQ stock exchange at an IPO price of $135 per share, reaching an overall valuation of $1.77 trillion and setting a new record for the largest IPO in the history of the space economy. The listing is widely regarded by industry observers as a landmark moment that marks the formal arrival of the orbital economy era, and as a clear endorsement from capital markets of the commercial prospects for space infrastructure.
According to reports, the IPO represents a major milestone in SpaceX's development. Founded by Elon Musk in 2002, the company operates across multiple sectors, including reusable launch vehicles, satellite internet services, and human spaceflight, and has long been viewed as the flagship enterprise of the global commercial space industry. Over the years, SpaceX has significantly reduced the cost of reaching orbit through the recovery and reuse of its Falcon-series rockets, while continuing to advance the development and test flights of its Starship heavy-lift reusable launch vehicle, with these technical advances widely seen as core factors supporting the company's premium valuation.
Market observers noted that the $1.77 trillion valuation reflects strong investor expectations for long-term growth in the orbital economy. SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet business has already deployed a large-scale constellation of in-orbit satellites and provides broadband connectivity to users worldwide, while the company is also advancing deep-space exploration projects including crewed lunar missions and Mars transportation. Institutional investors generally believe that, with launch costs continuing to decline and on-orbit service demand expanding, the orbital economy is likely to form a stable trillion-dollar market over the next decade.
Pending official confirmation: details such as the total amount of capital raised in this IPO, the composition of cornerstone investors, the stock's first-day performance after listing, and lock-up arrangements remain subject to official NASDAQ announcements and related SEC disclosure filings.
