What valuation will SpaceX see next?
$800 billion it is. +100%
The other part of the articles is potential late 2026 IPO.
SpaceX IPO target: 2026. The Information (@Katie_Roof) reports.
Ken Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.
QuoteSpaceX IPO target: 2026. The Information (@Katie_Roof) reports.QuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.https://twitter.com/KenKirtland17/status/1997056518148313282
Quote from: catdlr on 12/05/2025 10:19 pmQuoteSpaceX IPO target: 2026. The Information (@Katie_Roof) reports.QuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.https://twitter.com/KenKirtland17/status/1997056518148313282There’s a lot to unpack here but Musk has estimated that it would “only” take a trillion to kickstart a Mars colony. If this new valuation holds he will be worth around 660 billion. If he meets his insane Tesla targets he will be worth probably north of 2 TrillionHe could quite literally fund Mars out of pocket and still be a trillionaire. Crazy to even think about it but seems possibleAs a bonus it would reward employees and early investors with a true windfall, among other benefits. Not to discount the drawbacks of course
QuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.
Quote from: catdlr on 12/05/2025 10:19 pmQuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.This is false, the "company must maximize shareholder value no matter what" idea comes from Milton Friedman's NYT op-ed, it's not a legal requirement.
Companies are allowed to execute speculative long term strategies that do not bring in short term profit, for example Meta already lost more than $70B in metaverse.
One can make a reasonable business case that create a new habitable planet would have return eventually, just not in the near term.
There're also various ways a company can legally encode some sort of public benefit as part of their mission.
Quote from: thespacecow on 12/06/2025 02:46 amQuote from: catdlr on 12/05/2025 10:19 pmQuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.This is false, the "company must maximize shareholder value no matter what" idea comes from Milton Friedman's NYT op-ed, it's not a legal requirement.Once you take other peoples money then you have a fiduciary duty to provide them with value. Right now that is the situation with the current investors in SpaceX, who have been waiting patiently for many years to see a return on their investments.Of course if you go public, then you are just trading investors - from smart investors that are willing to play the long game, to a mishmash of investor types, including some that want short term gain.QuoteCompanies are allowed to execute speculative long term strategies that do not bring in short term profit, for example Meta already lost more than $70B in metaverse.Nobody can do anything about what Mark Zuckerberg does but Mark, since he controls the majority of the voting rights (not the stock, but the voting rights equal to about 60% of voting power). Elon Musk installed his own Board of Directors for Tesla, which is how he can get away with being given obscene amounts of stock options while EV car sales fall.The issue with SpaceX won't be cash flow, but what to do with that cash flow, because...QuoteOne can make a reasonable business case that create a new habitable planet would have return eventually, just not in the near term....I don't think anyone can truly make a business case for colonizing Mars. Musk didn't think there was one, and he of all people would have trumpeted as much as possible any hint of potential profit. Just look what he has been doing with FSD with Tesla for so many years. QuoteThere're also various ways a company can legally encode some sort of public benefit as part of their mission.You mean like being a non-profit or a B-Corp? If so, then we'll hear about it well before they announce going public, because they'll want to test the waters, so to speak.
Where does this "Fiduciary duty" come from?The company has a purpose defined in its articles of incorporation. You buy into that when you invest.If the company says its purpose and plan is to colonize Mars, then that's what you're buying into.
spending over a trillion dollars to colonize Mars without any plausible profits would generate a swarm of lawsuits. It would be framed as leadership (Musk) pursuing a personal goal to the detriment of the company and shareholders.
MAKING LIFE MULTIPLANETARYSpaceX was founded under the belief that a future where humanity is out exploring the stars is fundamentally more exciting than one where we are not.
Where does this "Fiduciary duty" come from?The company has a purpose defined in its articles of incorporation. You buy into that when you invest.If the company says its purpose and plan is to colonize Mars, then that's what you're buying into.You could spin a long tale about how there's eventual profit in that, but you don't have to.People can invest in nVidia if they want to, or Exxon Mobile. But if they buy SpaceX stock after SpaceX says they plan to colonize Mars, then that's that.
Quote from: thespacecow on 12/06/2025 02:46 amQuote from: catdlr on 12/05/2025 10:19 pmQuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.This is false, the "company must maximize shareholder value no matter what" idea comes from Milton Friedman's NYT op-ed, it's not a legal requirement.Once you take other peoples money then you have a fiduciary duty to provide them with value. Right now that is the situation with the current investors in SpaceX, who have been waiting patiently for many years to see a return on their investments.Of course if you go public, then you are just trading investors - from smart investors that are willing to play the long game, to a mishmash of investor types, including some that want short term gain.
QuoteCompanies are allowed to execute speculative long term strategies that do not bring in short term profit, for example Meta already lost more than $70B in metaverse.Nobody can do anything about what Mark Zuckerberg does but Mark, since he controls the majority of the voting rights (not the stock, but the voting rights equal to about 60% of voting power). Elon Musk installed his own Board of Directors for Tesla, which is how he can get away with being given obscene amounts of stock options while EV car sales fall.
QuoteThere're also various ways a company can legally encode some sort of public benefit as part of their mission.You mean like being a non-profit or a B-Corp? If so, then we'll hear about it well before they announce going public, because they'll want to test the waters, so to speak.
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 12/06/2025 03:18 amQuote from: thespacecow on 12/06/2025 02:46 amQuote from: catdlr on 12/05/2025 10:19 pmQuoteKen Kirtland IV@KenKirtland17I’m not exaggerating. It’s not doom posting to say this is the official end. They are not serious about any part of Mars if this is done. There is no world where shareholders let you spend tens of billions with the express intent of no return. Which is what Mars settlement is. In fact it would literally be illegal for them to do so.This is false, the "company must maximize shareholder value no matter what" idea comes from Milton Friedman's NYT op-ed, it's not a legal requirement.Once you take other peoples money then you have a fiduciary duty to provide them with value. Right now that is the situation with the current investors in SpaceX, who have been waiting patiently for many years to see a return on their investments.Of course if you go public, then you are just trading investors - from smart investors that are willing to play the long game, to a mishmash of investor types, including some that want short term gain.Mishmash of SpaceX investor types already exist even today. For example the spectrum buy from EchoStar would make them owning ~3% of SpaceX, you think EchoStar is 100% aligned with SpaceX's goals?If SpaceX makes further acquisitions they'll have to give more stocks to outsiders who may not be well aligned with company's goals, so staying private is not a panacea here.Quote from: Coastal RonQuoteCompanies are allowed to execute speculative long term strategies that do not bring in short term profit, for example Meta already lost more than $70B in metaverse.Nobody can do anything about what Mark Zuckerberg does but Mark, since he controls the majority of the voting rights (not the stock, but the voting rights equal to about 60% of voting power). Elon Musk installed his own Board of Directors for Tesla, which is how he can get away with being given obscene amounts of stock options while EV car sales fall.This is already answered, SpaceX stocks is already arranged similar to Meta where Elon holds vast majority of the voting shares.As for Tesla, first of all Elon didn't get "obscene amounts of stock options", he'll only get the stock options if he manages to lead Tesla to reach very ambitious goals. But more importantly to our discussion, it's not just the BoD who approved the award plan, the investors especially retail investors voted overwhelmingly to approve the plan, so Elon has a history of being able to get strong support from public investors.Quote from: Coastal RonQuoteThere're also various ways a company can legally encode some sort of public benefit as part of their mission.You mean like being a non-profit or a B-Corp? If so, then we'll hear about it well before they announce going public, because they'll want to test the waters, so to speak.I was thinking of OpenAI's setup where a non-profit is setup to own part of the for profit company, but I'm not an expert here, Grok thinks there're various ways to do this. If the IPO plan is real, I'm sure we'll hear about it in the next few months.