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Elon Musk offered a one-word rebuttal — 'False' — to reports that SpaceX had quietly reduced its IPO valuation target from over $2 trillion to $1.8 trillion ahead of what could become the largest public offering in history. The denial did little to quiet investor debate over how to price a company that now spans commercial spaceflight, satellite internet, and an expanding portfolio of defense contracts.
That defense dimension grew substantially this week as SpaceX secured a $4.16 billion Space Force contract to build a satellite constellation — part of the Golden Dome program — that will track aircraft, cruise missiles, and airborne threats from orbit. The award positions SpaceX as integral to America's early warning infrastructure, a level of strategic importance that analysts say justifies premium valuations while simultaneously creating regulatory and political risks around foreign ownership.
A $2 trillion valuation would place SpaceX above Apple and Microsoft at their current market capitalizations, representing an entirely new category of corporation that combines infrastructure, technology, and defense contracting. The IPO comparison point most frequently cited is Saudi Aramco's 2019 debut, which SpaceX would potentially exceed in scale.
The competitive landscape shifted further this week when Blue Origin suffered an explosion that threatens NASA's moon mission timeline. SpaceX's position strengthens whenever a rival faces setbacks, though the incident also raises questions about whether the commercial space sector has sufficient redundancy for missions deemed critical to national objectives.