A forecast of the fair market value of SpaceX's businesses

(futuresearch.ai)

82 points | by ddp26 2 hours ago ago

114 comments

  • malfist 2 hours ago

    An passive investors are going to get hosed by this thanks to NASDAQ cooking the rules to favor Elon and his band of misfits.

    No longer will there be a year of price discovery for index funds, 15 days. Meaning index funds have to buy it at the peak of the hype cycle. Will be a huge wealth transfer from mom and pop retirement accounts to the ultra wealthy.

    • taurath an hour ago

      When index funds became such a default I knew they’d change the rules.

      They’re taking everything thats not nailed down. A wealth tax is the only way, it cannot continue like this.

      • ddp26 3 minutes ago

        Got a source on this? I didn't take into account in this forecast that public markets could be very inefficient in this way.

      • gigatexal an hour ago

        Yeah imma get out of index and hold my basket and just rebalance. This is dumb. Why bend the rules for a trillionaire?

      • gruez an hour ago

        Who's "they"? Billionaires? Wall st? SpaceX insiders and investors?

        • motbus3 37 minutes ago

          By now, questioning "who are they" is naive or plain weak.

          • gruez 10 minutes ago

            Someone who can't articulate who the villains are out of a pre-selected list and has to fall back to personal attacks is pretty "weak" as well.

        • scythe 16 minutes ago

          The unknown subject is a valid construction in language. It is not necessary to be able to answer "who's they?". It is semantically equivalent to saying "I knew the rules would be changed."

          There are also perfectly ordinary situations in which this pattern is used to imply the influence of an unknown party. "They built a bridge over the river." Clearly the speaker does not believe that bridges over rivers construct themselves. She doesn't need to know who built the bridge.

          • gruez 12 minutes ago

            >There are also perfectly ordinary situations in which this construction is used to infer the influence of an unknown party. "They built a bridge over the river." Clearly the speaker does not believe that bridges over rivers construct themselves. She doesn't need to know who built the bridge.

            This excuse only works if who built the bridge isn't central to the discussion. Otherwise this is just generic conspiratorial thinking that we're being oppressed by The Elites™.

        • whattheheckheck 35 minutes ago

          Open your eyes? Everyone on the top 1000 Forbes and at trumps inauguration?

        • nutjob2 42 minutes ago

          Yes.

    • tliptay an hour ago

      Wow! This comment inspired me to dig deeper.

      After 20+ years in the market, today I learned: "The S&P 500 is a float-adjusted, market-capitalization-weighted index."

      So presumably an S&P 500 index fund is not disadvantaged, since it is tracking a float-adjusted index, i.e. the weight of SpaceX will be tiny if its float is tiny.

      Or, is there a nuance that I'm missing?

    • JumpCrisscross an hour ago

      > An passive investors are going to get hosed by this thanks to NASDAQ cooking the rules

      I’m genuinely confused how a passive investor winds up tracking the NASDAQ 100 versus a broader index.

      Also, if you’re picking and choosing your exposures, you aren’t passive.

      • lxgr an hour ago

        That sounds like a "no true scotsman" argument. Even passive investors need to pick some methodology of how to pick assets and how to relatively weigh them, and while you can make that as mathematically simple as possible, it's arguably an active decision.

        Or would you say that e.g. an ETF tracking MSCI ex-US is not a passive fund?

        • bitmasher9 34 minutes ago

          I’d also argue that "passive investor" applies more to the buy and hold strategy when paired with low engagement in the account (few transactions, or scheduled transactions).

          I’d consider someone that puts $50 into Coca Cola stock every paycheck a passive investor

      • malfist 27 minutes ago

        A broader index that tracks the NASDAQ tracks the NASDAQ 100 and is impacted by this rule.

        You buy VTI, you're impacted.

    • stouset 30 minutes ago

      They’re also reducing the float requirements, which is absolutely insane. As a passive investor with significant assets outside of tax-protected retirement accounts, I am beyond livid. If I have to switch investments to move away from the rules being changed out from under me, it will result in enormous tax consequences.

      I don’t tend to let my emotions out this much here, but utterly fuck everything about this administration, and fuck anyone who voted in favor of it.

    • lxgr an hour ago

      Huh, TIL, thank you.

      Seems like MSCI can add new large constituents very quickly as well [1], so to remain neutral to the frenzy until a price has been discovered, one might need to actively short.

      [1] e.g. https://www.msci.com/eqb/methodology/meth_docs/MSCI_GIMIMeth...

    • yandie 2 hours ago

      Now I need a fund that will honor a year of price discovery rather than 15 days. Any recommendations?

      • malfist 2 hours ago

        Legally, any fund that tracks the NASDAQ 100 must follow the rules set by NASDAQ, so you'd want something that is neither a total market index, nor tracks the NASDAQ. Something like an S&P500 index would work

        • oa335 25 minutes ago

          Not legally, only by contract/specification. Funds could get sued for deviating from the index, but funds generally have a decent amount of discretion in my experience in how they handle rebalancing.

        • JumpCrisscross an hour ago

          > Legally, any fund that tracks the NASDAQ 100 must follow the rules set by NASDAQ

          No? Contractually, maybe. But legally you can do whatever you want with index constructions.

          • lxgr an hour ago

            Are indexes not covered by copyright, even if you don't mention the underlying data source by name?

            If they are, you'd only get a license when accepting their terms.

          • malfist an hour ago

            You might be surprised to learn that the stock markets are heavily regulated.

        • dmoy an hour ago

          What is an example nasdaq 100 fund that isn't float adjusted?

          • gruez an hour ago

            >that isn't float adjusted?

            AFAIK the problem is that they're lobbying the nasdaq 100 index provider to add a 5x multiplier for free float for spacex. Otherwise it would be far less controversial.

            edit: https://keubiko.substack.com/p/nasdaqs-shame

        • charcircuit 2 hours ago

          What law prevents someone from choosing to buy stocks from the NASDAQ 100 however they want for a fund?

          • dmurray an hour ago

            Actively managed funds like that charge around 0.5% to 1% a year. E.g. [0] The most prominent Nasdaq ETF, QQQ, charges 0.2% [1]

            Spacex will be around 4.5% of the index [2].

            If you believe the thesis of the article that Spacex is about 30% overvalued, and if the only advantage your fund manager has over the rest of the market is that they will avoid Spacex, they will save you 1% of your money over the lifetime of your investment. Assuming you're saving for retirement in 30 years time, the fees will cost you 15% or more.

            Maybe your fund manager finds a Spacex-level mispricing every two years. In that case, they're worth the fees. Some people will tell you nobody can beat the market. My employer among others believes very strongly in the idea that some people do make better investment decisions than average. What is certainly true is that not everyone does.

            [0] https://helpcenter.ark-funds.com/what-is-the-fee-structure-e...

            [1] https://www.invesco.com/qqq-etf/en/home.html

            [2] https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/04/01/how-the-spacex-cou...

            • WalterBright 19 minutes ago

              > the idea that some people do make better investment decisions than average.

              Of course some do. After all, that's what makes an "average".

              Some people are taller than average, too!

          • davey48016 an hour ago

            You can make a mutual fund or ETF with any stocks you want, you just can't call it a NASDAQ 100 fund if you're not tracking the NASDAQ 100 index.

            • lxgr 33 minutes ago

              It's an interesting question whether you could legally track the NASDAQ 100 without calling it that, or something very similar, e.g. "NASDAQ 100, but with a one year delay for new listings".

              But assuming it is: How would you even call it, and how would you describe your methodology in the prospectus? "Tech 100 (compare with e.g. NASDAQ)"?

            • tonyedgecombe an hour ago

              Is that really true? It doesn’t sound likely to me. Then again I’m often surprised by this stuff.

          • bluecalm an hour ago

            You need enough customers to make it profitable at reasonably low expense ratio.

    • cr125rider 38 minutes ago

      Does the hype cycle even last 15 days in 2026? It seems like they stabilize after a day or two. Happy to be proven wrong here…

  • saadn92 an hour ago

    The xAI piece is the one that stands out to me. $258B for a lab that's burning $1.46B/quarter against $430M revenue, valued almost entirely on a merger anchor from four months ago.

    • ddp26 an hour ago

      As I wrote in the piece, I'm extremely skeptical that xAI should be valued as if it is a frontier lab.

      But as you say, going back to the xAI + SpaceX merger, analysts consistently seem to value it as if it is, so I predict the public will too, at IPO time.

      • mikkupikku an hour ago

        I assume "extremely skeptical" is you being generous, is there anybody other than Elon who says xAI/Grok are SOTA? The only thing anybody says about it is that it's only good for porn, but local models do porn too so xAI has no moat or edge at all as far as I can see.

        • ddp26 4 minutes ago

          There is actually a real bull case for xAI (that I don't endorse), e.g. from people who think that chips & computer is the main determiner of model quality. xAI may plausibly soon have the biggest training apparatus of anyone.

          I think talent is more important than compute, as I wrote in my Jan 2026 predictions that Anthropic would end up on top this year: https://futuresearch.ai/blog/forecasting-top-ai-lab-2026/

        • ahahahahah 28 minutes ago

          > I assume "extremely skeptical" is you being generous

          I'm not sure that's the case. Every value in this forecast is absurd, I actually think the author is sincere in there feeling that they are being extremely skeptical.

    • cerved an hour ago

      For $380B you can get both AT&T and Verizon and you pay ~1.55x the revenue. Why pay 38x for Starlink?

      • ahahahahah 31 minutes ago

        What do you mean $380B? This "fair market value" forecast also includes $147B for starlink enterprise and $75B for starlink direct-to-cell. So almost $600B all in.

    • gizajob an hour ago

      It’s absolutely ludicrous that xAI is thrown into the mix at that valuation. They’re not even a player in AI other than providing Grok slop for twitter.

    • jmye an hour ago

      Even if you think those are standard numbers and you're banking on growth, or whatever, I don't see any way anyone rational (or even a semi-rational AI bull) could convince themselves xAI isn't an absolute garbage company.

  • sharemywin 2 hours ago

    Not bad for about $12-$16B in total actual revenue.

    net income probably: $1.5B – $3B

    P/E:500-1000

    Of course people will trip overthemselves to buy it up.

    • ddp26 2 hours ago

      Yeah, it's wild. But it's not like the P/E should be 30, what do you think would be fair?

      That's the thing about SpaceX, some businesses are real businesses that can be modeled in normal ways, like the government launch contracts, and to some degree starlink.

      Others, like ~all of xAI, and the starship stuff, are being valued completely independent of revenue. I predict the IPO investors will generally follow the analysis consensus today with those eye-popping numbers.

      • jmye an hour ago

        > But it's not like the P/E should be 30

        ... Why not? Aside from memes, I mean.

      • Noaidi an hour ago

        I mean, shouldn’t the price to earnings ratio be 1? Anything higher or lower is just speculating or other words, gambling.

        • ben_w 11 minutes ago

          P(rice)/E(arnings) ratio of 1 would mean it pays for itself in the earnings period.

          The earnings period is 1 year.

          It would mean making 100% return on investment each year. Being that low is only possible if there's reason to think the business is extremely precarious and unlikely to survive.

          P/E 30 means returns of 3.33%, P/E of 20 means 5%. These are sensible numbers given people have other investment opportunities.

          P/E of Tesla being 400 or so means it would take 400 years of its own profits to be able to afford to privatise itself, i.e. returns of 0.25%; being that high is a gamble that future revenue/unit time will go up by a factor of about 20 to bring it into the sensible range.

          The upper bound from the grandparent comment for P/E 500-1000, says the annual return is 0.1%, which is what I saw on various current accounts, not savings accounts, not special deals, current accounts.

        • cheschire an hour ago

          I remember in the 00’s when people would complain about how ridiculous a 30 PE was for tech stocks, and how no other stock was at that ridiculous price point except tech. Guess that starship has sailed.

        • fastball an hour ago

          Of course not. If the P/E was 1, every single public company would be immediately gobbled up by Private Equity firms, who would make their money back after a few years of operation and the rest would be pure profit.

          • Noaidi 30 minutes ago

            Of course they would! If the P/E of a company is 1.1 it is overvalued by definition so why would anyone buy an over valued company?

            So you have to be a complete idiot to but stock in a company with a P/E of 500!

            • darth_aardvark 16 minutes ago

              > Of course they would! If the P/E of a company is 1.1 it is overvalued by definition so why would anyone buy an over valued company?

              This is obviously untrue. Would you sell a box that spits out $1 million dollars a year for 1 million dollars?

        • daedrdev an hour ago

          I actually dont think the world will collapse by next quarter so am willing to bear the risk of doing so by having higher P/E.

        • lotsofpulp an hour ago

          At the extremes, taking the next step is speculating because you might trip and fall and hit your head.

    • brentm an hour ago

      It's hard to imagine this turn into 50-60% short term banger starting from a $1.75T market cap, I wonder if people will actually trip over themselves to buy. I had been thinking I wanted to jump on it to flip but at that price and the macro environment it may end up cratering before a pop. Seems like a sketchy buy.

    • sfblah an hour ago

      I just don't think space is as useful or profitable as people think. Time will tell.

    • arealaccount 2 hours ago

      According to commentators on other threads people with any index funds will be automatically buying, no need to trip over ourselves

      • elevation 2 hours ago

        Any funds you'd recommend that would preserve the legacy 1 year watch period?

        • dmoy 2 hours ago

          The float adjustment probably handles this for you? The tiny amount of float of that $1.75T means that for any large total market or s&p or whatever fund (VTI, SPY, etc), SpaceX is going to be a minuscule fraction of the fund.

          Apple has a float of >99%. SpaceX is going to come out with 3-4% float. Since all big serious total market / whatever index funds are float adjusted, this means that SpaceX will be treated more like a company with $45B market cap, not $1.5T or whatever.

          If you're buying most index funds, you should literally not care about this.

          If you buy VTI, then SpaceX is going to be like what, <0.1% of the fund? That is noise.

          • spprashant an hour ago

            I am not smart with stock legal-ese but I pasting something I found in a different article here.

            > To balance index integrity and investability, Nasdaq proposes a new approach for including and weighting low-float securities (those below 20% free float). Each low-float security’s weight will be adjusted to five times its free float percentage, capped at 100%. Securities with more than 20% free float will continue to be weighted at full, eligible listed market capitalization, while those below 20% free float will be weighted proportionally to preserve investability.

            > The rule reportedly includes a 5x float multiplier for low-float stocks, which would require passive vehicles to treat SpaceX as if it had significantly more tradable shares than actually exist, essentially forcing funds to chase the price.

            It sounds to me like a way to increase demand for low float stocks by treating the float higher than it actually is. Glad to hear the explanations about this.

          • conductr an hour ago

            > If you're buying most index funds, you should literally not care about this.

            Disagree. Buyers of index funds should care about fiduciary and waste. This is what this seems like at this price. Granted, I’d be more concerned if the fund manager was buying it without a requirement to. The issue still remains about why are we paying so much for this stock? Make it make sense?

            • gruez an hour ago

              >Buyers of index funds should care about fiduciary and waste. This is what this seems like at this price.

              Right, but the whole point of index funds is that you're letting the market decide what's worth investing/buying (via market cap/free float weightings) and at what price. If you're making calls on what's "waste" or not, then you're no longer a passive investor and you're just picking stocks.

          • danny_codes an hour ago

            Which is how Elon gets away with fleecing the retails. Someone with 100k in VTI is giving $100 to Elon at a p/e of 1000.

            You have to hand it to him, he’s the best grifter we’ve seen in years.

      • heyitsmedotjayb 2 hours ago

        I remember when this happened with Nortel!

    • lxgr an hour ago

      But consider that they will eventually own the entire observable universe excluding Earth! /s

  • Octoth0rpe 30 minutes ago

    Does it make sense to value Starship Commercial Launch at $170B, _and_ Falcon 9/Heavy at $100B? I would expect that if Starship achieves its operational goals, then it should quickly deprecate nearly all uses of Falcon, the exceptions being national security launches that require validating the launcher, or Dragon launches for similar reasons. Even those categories are likely on a countdown the moment starship is rapidly reusable.

  • proteal an hour ago

    It’s also one of the thinnest floats IPO’ing. They’re only selling less than 5% of the company. That introduces a lot of sensitivity in the valuation, not to mention there exists a bit of game theory around fund managers needing to join in to maintain nominal returns with their peers.

    Check out Matt Levine commentary, which goes into more detail (SpaceX Indexing) https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/newsletters/2026-03-31/are...

    • JumpCrisscross an hour ago

      > They’re only selling less than 5% of the company

      Wait for the lock-up terms.

  • tliptay an hour ago

    Grok: lots of competitors & my 4th choice in LLM models.

    Starship: zero competitors & potentially makes humans inter-planetary.

    Seems crazy if investors put more value on Grok.

    • germinalphrase an hour ago

      “potentially makes humans inter-planetary”

      What is the realistic, non-science fiction appeal of this?

      • stouset 27 minutes ago

        I would wager minerals mining and tourism are probably the only meaningful revenue sources in our lifetimes.

    • compiler-guy an hour ago

      These premises may or may not make sense, but the thing that matters is capturable revenue.

      Humans being interplanetary would be an amazing technical tour de force. But relatively speaking, there isn’t much revenue there.

      • malfist 22 minutes ago

        These premises may or may not make sense, but the thing that matters is capturable revenue.

        European settlers being on the north american continent would be an amazing technical tour de force. But relatively speaking, there isn't much revenue there.

        • WalterBright 14 minutes ago

          Jamestown was a failure.

          The Pilgrims starved their first year.

          • malfist 2 minutes ago

            Okay? The US is the largest country market in the world.

  • lokimedes an hour ago

    I know it’s easy to sit at home being indignant at the internet, but how on earth does an ISP with 10M subscribers and the most expensive infrastructure in the solar system ever come out to be worth $300B? They even have to routinely replenish their “cell towers” as their orbits decay.

    Any mid-sized country would have multiple cellphone and Internet providers with larger customer bases and less upkeep.

  • genidoi an hour ago

    > Starship at $170B is pure option value on technology still in advanced testing.

    The argument that Starship is somehow an experimental/unproven technology that might fail to materialise was absurd but plausible sounding before flight 1, there were many new technologies simultaneously being deployed to a single launch system in one go.

    But after 3 tower catches of the booster demonstrating centimetres of guided precision of the entire stack, this is becoming a tired argument.

    I know the author is not making that case at all here, but it seems like one the core reasons to undervalue SpaceX is that Starship might not work out, and this all sounds exactly like how reusability might not work out for the Falcon 9 from 10 years ago.

    • venusenvy47 5 minutes ago

      The booster is definitely looking good, just like the Falcon 9 booster is very reliable. The big question for me is the upper stage, and whether they will be able to reuse anywhere near as often as they claim. It is so much more complex than the Falcon upper stages, which aren't reusable very quickly. It seems they have a lot to learn about upper stage reusability.

    • kibwen an hour ago

      The question is not even whether or not Starship works. Starship is, in theory, designed with the idea of getting many, many payloads to Mars. However, getting payloads to Mars is not currently something that anyone is paying for; even NASA isn't going to focus on Mars for at least another decade (likely more). And in the meantime, it's not like we don't have rockets capable of getting payloads to Mars (the Saturn V was fully capable of doing so in the 60s). Likewise in the meantime, the Artemis plans that look to require a dozen+ launches for a single moonshot aren't painting Starship in a favorable light.

      So what is the near-to-medium-term economic prospect of Starship? That's the question. You can't just say "bigger rocket make more money", because there exists a useful upper to the size of payloads that companies actually want to ship to LEO in practice. To use an analogy, we have jumbo jets, but most flights are not on jumbo jets.

      • fastball an hour ago

        > because there exists a useful upper to the size of payloads that companies actually want to ship to LEO in practice

        This is only true because we are so completely beholden to the tyranny of the rocket equation with the current status quo. With the $/kg (and payload volume) that Starship would unlock, the entire ELO/GEO/Interplanetary/Deep Space market looks very different.

        Labs in space. Hotels in space. Weapons in space. Much more interesting satellites in space. More government science missions. Privately funded science/research missions. etc

        • multiplegeorges an hour ago

          How many space telescopes better than anything we currently have can we put up when launch costs are <$50m?

          A huge synthetic telescope in orbit with an aperture the size of the planet?

          How many private earth observation satellites?

          The market is huge when weight constraints largely go away and $/kg drops so hard.

          • kibwen 38 minutes ago

            The question is whether those markets are not already adequately served by Falcon 9. Once again, just because you have a jumbo jet that can fly 500 people from New York to London does not mean that everyone flying out of New York wants to go to London, and it doesn't mean that it's worth flying that jumbo jet from New York to Pierre, South Dakota with only one passenger on board.

            • fastball 30 minutes ago

              > The question is whether those markets are not already adequately served by Falcon 9

              What does that even mean? Almost every single Falcon 9 customer will prefer launching on Starship if/when it is available, because the cost will be much lower. A very small segment who have payloads that are exactly Falcon 9 sized and want a very particular orbit might still be better served by F9, but maybe not.

              Beyond that, much lower cost unlocks previously untenable opportunities that you have not sufficiently imagined, as stated earlier.

        • daedrdev an hour ago

          Like imagine how much better the James web could have been with such a large and cheap launch vehicle.

          • kibwen 41 minutes ago

            That's not how this works. The JWST was limited by the size of its faring, but increasing the size of the faring doesn't mean they'd ship a less complex telescope with the same functionality; they'd ship an equally-complex telescope with more functionality. Better for science, yes, but that doesn't translate to more expenditure that could be captured by the launch company. And that still relies on a government that gives a damn about funding science, which is not not the direction that the US is heading in.

            • fastball 26 minutes ago

              > that doesn't translate to more expenditure that could be captured by the launch company.

              Of course it does. With Starship, SpaceX could've charged NASA/ESA more to launch a bigger JWST than the cost to launch with Ariane 5, with huge profit margins.

              On top of that, with a much larger fairing, you could almost certainly simplify the telescope and increase capability. A significant part of the JWST's complexity is the unfolding sequence, which could be simplified with a fairing that is more than double (triple? quadruple?) the volume.

        • mikkupikku an hour ago

          Weapons in space, yes. Government constellations are SpaceX's best opportunity. As for anything else, the market for anything bigger than Falcon 9 is very small. Elon Musk didn't even want to proceed with Falcon Heavy because there isn't much market for even that, but Shotwell managed to convince him that having Falcon Heavy would actually help sales of Falcon 9, by inducing the government to take SpaceX more seriously.

          • kibwen 35 minutes ago

            Agreed. The real bull case for SpaceX is that the US government will use it to aggressively militarize LEO.

      • bpodgursky an hour ago

        > there exists a useful upper to the size of payloads that companies actually want to ship to LEO in practice

        Well, they are going to live with multi-customer payloads if Starship can do it for a tenth of the price. There's already a large market for ride-sharing and it's only going to get bigger.

        • kibwen 43 minutes ago

          > There's already a large market for ride-sharing and it's only going to get bigger.

          Except that at some point this stops being true. Induced demand is not infinite. There's no telling when we'll reach that point, or indeed if we've already reached it.

    • ddp26 an hour ago

      Yeah, I might have stated this poorly. In the forecast it's just a question of expected value, I don't give almost any probability to "Starship is worthless".

      My 50% CI on Starship's fair market value at IPO time is $123b - $227b, with a 80% CI even wider, not based on my own modeling, but based on anchoring to analysts that give credible arguments.

    • soperj an hour ago

      > and this all sounds exactly like how reusability might not work out at all for the Falcon 9 from 10 years ago

      I think a lot of it depends on whether they can make the reuse of the second stage work without having to redo stuff constantly like the shuttle. Reusing the booster will obviously save tons of money and make launches cheaper, but they're competing with themselves here. How big is the launch market with cheaper launches? We don't actually know.

    • enslavedrobot an hour ago

      The viability of direct to cell connectivity at scale is unproven. This is actually the core value of SpaceX in the next 3-5 years.

      The other core value generation product will be financial transactions. It is unproven whether X money will be adopted for friction free transactions across national boundaries and whether the company can compete in the financial services sector.

    • maxerickson an hour ago

      How are they doing with their mass to orbit projections?

    • AlexandrB an hour ago

      The tower catches are great, but the payload rating has been reduced several times now[1] and with it the economic argument for how Starship will make launching much cheaper than today as well as suitability for lunar/Mars launches. For Starship to be revolutionary enough for this kind of valuation it has to not just work, but outperform current solutions.

      SpaceX has basically admitted as much by promising Starship 2 & 3 with larger payloads (that Starship 1 was already supposed to deliver).

      [1] https://www.americaspace.com/2024/04/20/starship-faces-perfo...

      • fastball an hour ago

        That article is two years old. In traditional space launch terms that is a very short amount of time, but in SpaceX terms that's quite a while. They've already progressed to Starship 2 since then and are going to launch Starship 3 imminently (slated this month), which has Raptor v3 engines onboard and come with the efficiency gains you are talking about.

    • croes an hour ago

      Compared to Falcon 9 Starship has still more quality issues than the Falcon 9 at the same test stage

    • Izikiel43 an hour ago

      They caught it 3 times already!?

      I missed 2 and 3 it seems.

  • boringg an hour ago

    Anyone in this thread know how much SpaceX investors got diluted when they bought xAI/GROK?

    • jdross an hour ago

      It was 1T post merger with xAI being 250B of it, SpaceX being 750B

  • jgbuddy an hour ago

    Were people overpaying 30% for tesla in 2010?

    • croes an hour ago

      Yes, and they still do

      • lotsofpulp an hour ago

        Tesla's highest market cap in 2010 was $3.3B. Tesla has more net income, sometimes multiples more, per year, from 2021 to 2025.

        For comparison, it is routine to see sale prices of 3x to 5x revenue for many, many kinds of everyday businesses that have much less potential than Tesla.

        There are very, very few businesses whose shares one could have purchased in 2010 that performed better over the subsequent 15 years. That is about as objective as one can get about determining whether or not something was under or over valued (in 2010).

      • arein3 an hour ago

        Is musk derangement syndrome a thing?

  • ChrisArchitect an hour ago

    Related:

    The SpaceX IPO: retail investor notes

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47612775

    SpaceX files to go public

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47604155

  • bobtheborg an hour ago

    Having never really looked at valuations, my ignorant mind can get from Starlink's 10M subscribers to a $380B valuation. If you make $100/mo/user that's 12B/yr and that with a higher 50x P/E ratio is 60B. If you go to 100x, that's $120B.

  • vesnanomikai an hour ago

    the xai/grok valuation is wild. my little RAG app's inference costs on a few A10s are already a pain to manage; i can't imagine their

  • rvz 2 hours ago

    All these IPOs are extremely bearish and mirroring the 2019 race-for-the-exit IPOs out there.

    Of course once again, you are "not allowed" to be early into pre-IPO companies which is where the actual money is made.

    The moment several companies start IPOing, you are already too late for those multiples and have to wait for a massive crash until these stocks reach all time lows after IPO.

  • righthand 2 hours ago

    Wall Street, ICE jobs, bs AI valuations, etc is proof that there are just enough stupid people in this country to ruin it all for the rest of us.

  • paxys 2 hours ago

    Everyone is so confident in their reading of tea leaves

    • ddp26 2 hours ago

      I read your comment as being glib, but in forecasting this I was really puzzled how much to anchor to how analysts tend to value these businesses.

      I ended up largely deferring to them, e.g. predicting the public will value xAI at $258 billion ($222b - $310b) at time of IPO, even though I've elsewhere been skeptical that xAI should be valued like a frontier AI lab.

      It's a keynesian beauty contest