Zhou Hang: How much is SpaceX really worth?
Author: Zhou Hang
SpaceX's valuation before and after the IPO may be overestimated by $1.25 trillion.
This is not to deny the greatness of SpaceX. On the contrary, anyone who seriously discusses SpaceX must first acknowledge: it may be one of the greatest industrial companies of the past 50 years.
However, the greatness of a company and whether a stock is worth buying at any price are two completely different matters.
SpaceX can simultaneously be "the greatest industrial entity of the 21st century" and "a severely overvalued investment target." These two things do not conflict.
■ Acknowledge that it is indeed great
Any honest discussion about SpaceX's valuation must start with one statement: it is the most successful industrial company of the past 25 years, without exception— even more successful than Tesla. This is not hyperbole; it is a fact in engineering economics.
Tesla disrupted a 150-year-old mature industry— the automobile. Its competitors are Mercedes, Ford, and Toyota. These competitors are certainly not weak, but they are commercial companies without the backing of national interests, without political barriers; the essence of competition is products, brands, and supply chains.
SpaceX disrupted a 60-year-old national monopoly industry— aerospace. Its competitors are NASA, Roscosmos, ESA, and CNSA. This is a completely different level of difficulty: higher engineering thresholds, greater capital density, more complex regulations, and deeper binding of national interests. When Musk founded SpaceX in 2002, the entire aerospace industry was basically an extension of national missions; commercial companies were not considered capable of making rockets, let alone making rockets cheaper than the government.
More than 20 years later, SpaceX has cut launch costs from the Space Shuttle era's $54,500/kg to $1,500/kg— a decrease of 36 times. It now launches 165 times a year, more than all other countries and all commercial players combined. It has built the first truly reusable rocket in human history, with a single Falcon 9 first stage flying 32 times, achieving a success rate of over 99%. It has established the world's first global satellite internet— with coverage for over a billion users, becoming a decisive strategic asset on the first day of the Ukraine war.
Tesla will still face fierce competition from Chinese electric vehicles in 2025; SpaceX's share of the global commercial launch market is close to monopoly.
SpaceX is a great company, possibly the greatest industrial company on Earth in the past 50 years. Any criticism regarding its valuation must first acknowledge this fact.
■ What does $1.75 trillion mean?
Let's look at a comparison:
- Boeing + Lockheed + Northrop + RTX + GD total market capitalization. SpaceX's valuation is 2.5 times the sum of these five companies.
In other words, the valuation of SpaceX alone exceeds the entire annual GDP of Mexico, surpassing Tesla + Berkshire, and is 2.5 times the total market capitalization of all traditional aerospace competitors.
This in itself is not a problem— great companies should have great valuations. But this 2.5 times ratio means the market is not pricing it as a "space company" or as an "industrial company." The market is pricing it according to a mixed paradigm that is closer to "sovereign assets + AI era infrastructure + story premium."
Is this valuation reasonable?
If we list all of SpaceX's current businesses and seriously calculate how much revenue it can generate by 2030, we can estimate each line under a reasonable optimistic scenario:
If SpaceX achieves revenue of $50-80B by 2030, the corresponding EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization, roughly understood as the operating cash profitability of the company's main business) would be about $20-35B (at a 40% margin, which is already a very optimistic figure).
Using a SaaS diversification standard of 25-35 times EV/EBITDA multiple— which is already a top-tier valuation for tech companies— SpaceX's "reasonable valuation" range in 2030 is $500B to $1.2T.
Taking the conservative anchor point of $500B (i.e., estimating all 2030 businesses under reasonable rather than crazy assumptions), the market is pricing it at $1.75T.
The difference: $1.25T.
This part of the difference cannot be explained by any standard financial model. It is not the result of DCF (Discounted Cash Flow), nor is it derived from P/S ratios or comparable company references— all these methods cannot yield $1.75T.
This difference does not appear out of thin air. It has three real sources:
First Source: Long-term vision premium. If Starship operates stably between 2027-2030, launch costs could drop to $200/kg or even lower. The release of capacity by 30 times— enough to support the birth of new businesses (in-orbit data centers, lunar commerce, deep space robotics). Anthropic has publicly expressed its willingness to "pay for space GW-level computing power." If this part of the story materializes, by 2040, the total market for SpaceX plus new businesses could reach $200-500B/year. This upper limit is indeed enormous— hence the market's reasonable allocation for the "vision premium."
Second Source: Sovereign asset + strategic position premium. SpaceX is no longer just a commercial company; it is a national strategic asset of the United States. $22B in government contracts, HLS lunar landing, NRO classified reconnaissance constellations, Golden Dome missile tracking— these bind SpaceX into the U.S. national security system. In today's rapidly dividing international communication order (China circle / U.S. circle / third parties), Starlink automatically gains "soft sovereignty" in all markets it can serve. The monetization of this status will take over 10 years to fully manifest, but the premium is real.
Third Source: Retail investors' yearning for heroic narratives + personal worship of Musk. This is the hardest to quantify, but anyone familiar with capital markets knows its power. Musk has 200 million followers on the X platform; he himself is a variable in market capitalization. The story of SpaceX— a private company sending people to Mars, building a global internet, making humanity a multi-planetary species— is the most heroic business story of the past 50 years.
Retail investors are not buying EBITDA; they are buying a ticket to participate in history.
The first two premiums are "real, but slow"; the third premium is "big, but fragile." The current valuation of $1.75T bets on all three being valid and without issues. This is a difficult combination to maintain.
What will happen after the IPO?
Assuming SpaceX completes its IPO in the second half of 2026, the next 3-5 years will likely unfold as follows:
Scenario A: Valuation solidifies (probability ~25%). Starship V3 successfully launches in 2027, enters stable operation in 2028, and the first GW-level space computing contract is secured in 2028. Lunar commerce progresses according to NASA's timeline. Although Starlink's growth slows, the aviation + maritime + D2C segments compensate for the slowdown in the residential market. In this scenario, $1.75T "begins to look cheap"— the market will re-evaluate it to $2-3T.
Scenario B: Valuation remains stable with fluctuations (probability ~50%). The pace of Starship's realization is slower than expected— if the test flight success rate is 5/25 = 20% in 2025, and if this realization rate continues in 2026-2027, true maturity for V3 may not come until 2029-2030. Starlink's growth rate falls back to +20% per year, and the xAI-Anthropic agreement is real cash flow but lacks a follow-up major contract. The market will find that "the narrative is faster than reality," with valuations fluctuating between $1.2T - $1.8T for 3-5 years. This is the most probable scenario.
Scenario C: Valuation re-discovery (probability ~25%). Starship continues to be delayed, xAI falls significantly behind in the AI competition, and personal risk events for Musk (health, reputation, politics) trigger a rapid contraction of the emotional premium. The market re-prices using financial models— valuations drop back to the $800B-$1.2T range, equivalent to "the reasonable valuation that an excellent industrial company should have." This scenario is actually good for long-term holders— but for retail investors who buy after the IPO, it represents a 30-50% paper loss.
Probability-weighted = 0.25 × upside + 0.50 × fluctuation + 0.25 × downside ≈ Expected value $1.3-1.5T, below the IPO offering price of $1.75T.
By weighting the three scenarios, the expected midpoint of SpaceX's valuation over the next 3-5 years is about $1.3-1.5T— lower than the current IPO offering price.
In layman's terms: Buying at $1.75T on IPO day, the expected return over 5 years is negative. This is the inevitable result of weighting the three scenarios by probability; in the most probable scenario, you won't get a return; in the worst scenario, you lose 30-50%; only in 1/4 of the scenarios do you make money.
In the words of Charlie Munger: this is not a bet worth taking.
■ A note for those planning to buy on IPO day
SpaceX is a great company, but a great company does not mean its stock should be bought at any price. These two matters should not be conflated.
Tesla was also considered by many to be "worth buying at any price" at the end of 2021— at that time, its market capitalization was $1.2T. Then, in the following two years, Tesla dropped 70%, from $1.2T to $400B. This was not because Tesla became a bad company— it remains an excellent electric vehicle company. It was because the price had moved too far ahead of the fundamentals.
SpaceX's current situation is highly similar to Tesla's at the end of 2021— possibly even more dangerous, because SpaceX's "vision premium" is higher, the story is grander, and retail participation may be deeper.
If you truly believe in SpaceX's long-term vision and are willing to hold for over 10 years, then buying at the IPO price may not be a problem— in 10 years, this company will likely be worth more. But if you expect to "double your investment in 1-3 years," then the math is not on your side.
A more rational strategy is:
- Do not chase high on IPO day; the premium is usually the highest on the first day of any super IPO.
- Wait for at least one of three things to happen: Starship V3 operates stably, the first GW-level space computing contract is secured, or the stock price falls back below $1T.
- If you must buy now, limit your position; do not treat it as a "sure bet"— it is not. It is a "meaningful long-term +/- 30% uncertainty."
■ It is a great company, but it can also be an expensive stock
The greatness of a company is a fact; whether a stock's price is reasonable is mathematics. Facts do not change, while mathematics changes every day. In SpaceX's current valuation structure, financial models can only explain half; the other half is market sentiment + sovereign status + personal worship— this part is not nonexistent, but it is fragile.
After the IPO, one thing will happen: retail investors will begin to measure this company using quarterly earnings. The first quarterly report, the second, the third— each will prompt the market to reconcile the "story" with "reality." This reconciliation process is usually unfriendly to short-term valuations.
If you are buying the company— the great industrial entity, the human infrastructure after Starship, the sovereign asset— then the IPO price is just a point in a 20-year marathon, and there is no need to get hung up on it.
If you are buying the story— participating in history, following heroes, for the sake of our eventual status as a multi-planetary species— then please acknowledge this is consumption, not investment. Consumption can be expensive, but you need to know what you are doing.
A company can be number one in the world, and its stock can simultaneously be overvalued by $1.25 trillion. Both of these statements are true, but they must be viewed separately; distinguish whether you are buying the company or the story.
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