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    Home » Sections » Investment » Wall Street strains to justify SpaceX’s $1.75-trillion price tag

    Wall Street strains to justify SpaceX’s $1.75-trillion price tag

    Wall Street is reaching for unusual comparables to justify SpaceX's $1.75-trillion valuation ahead of its IPO.
    By Agency Staff12 April 2026
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    Wall Street strains to justify SpaceX's $1.75-trillion price tag
    The entrance to the SpaceX rocket launch area in Brownsville, Texas. Veronica Gabriela Cardenas/Reuters

    Wall Street is reaching for some unusual yardsticks to price Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

    At least one of SpaceX’s large institutional investors is privately benchmarking the rocket and satellite company not against aerospace rivals like Boeing or telecommunications giants like AT&T, but against market darling Palantir Technologies and AI infrastructure plays like GE Vernova and Vertiv. This is in a bid to justify a US$1.75-trillion valuation ahead of what could be the largest IPO in history.

    The framework, described to Reuters for the first time by a source familiar with the company’s thinking, illustrates the unusual challenge of pricing a company with no obvious public peers — and the lengths to which Wall Street is going to rationalise a premium valuation.

    At a potential valuation of $1.75-trillion, SpaceX looks expensive by many traditional measures

    SpaceX has confidentially filed for a US IPO. The company is scheduled to hold an analyst day on 21 April. At a potential valuation of $1.75-trillion, SpaceX looks expensive by many traditional measures, including comparisons to the earnings and revenue multiples at firms often cited as reference points for parts of its business. In space that means Boeing and Lockheed Martin, whose United Launch Alliance joint venture competes with SpaceX in launch services. In internet access, the peers would be AT&T and Verizon.

    But financial backers of the firm, on track to raise $75-billion in an IPO this year, contend that comparisons to established firms in legacy businesses miss the point of SpaceX and other Musk companies — to take advantage of the emergence of long-term, “secular” economic shifts at a time when few competitors are equipped to do so.

    Rich multiples

    Musk’s companies have historically commanded rich multiples in part because investors are betting on him personally — Tesla being the clearest example — and SpaceX investors expect that dynamic to carry over into any public offering.

    It’s “pretty darn exciting” to sell into “the largest total addressable market in human history” — a potential $370-billion in space business, SpaceX chief financial officer Bret Johnsen told IPO bankers on a conference call last week, according to two people familiar with the matter. He tabbed the potential market for the firm’s Starlink internet service at $1.6-trillion, the people said.

    SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment.

    Read: SpaceX acquires xAI in record-breaking deal

    Finding the right comparables for SpaceX lies at the centre of a fierce debate over the pricing of the massive IPO, as bankers and investors grapple with how to value the company despite few, if any, closely comparable public peers.

    It is common for investors and bankers to sort for comparables by sector, using the longstanding assumption that industry is a good proxy for financial opportunity and risk. But many investors contend that comparable companies do not need to operate in the same industry — because, in this view, what matters are a firm’s potential cash flows, growth profiles and risk characteristics. This approach holds that a better comparison for SpaceX comes from companies selling into the AI data centre buildout, which have famously been rewarded with rising shares and high multiples.

    SpaceX

    For smaller funds, the calculus is different, said Jay Bala, portfolio manager at Toronto-based AIP, which manages roughly $100-million in assets, a large portion concentrated in SpaceX. “I’m piggybacking on the largest funds in the world. A huge amount of due diligence has already been done. I’m not going to second-guess some of the biggest investors on the planet,” he said. He acknowledged it is difficult to obtain detailed financial information about SpaceX: “You can only get so much. It’s hard to get numbers sometimes.”

    For Starlink — or what SpaceX calls its “connectivity” business — the reflexive benchmarks are legacy telecoms firms, but some investors argue those comparisons are skewed by ageing fixed infrastructure, saturated domestic markets and years of modest growth.

    “I wouldn’t look at a legacy AT&T and Verizon as being very relevant to the economic model for Starlink, even though they’re both in the business of giving you communication,” a senior executive at one of SpaceX’s large institutional investors said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss confidential internal work.

    I wouldn’t look at a legacy AT&T and Verizon as being very relevant to the economic model for Starlink

    Instead, SpaceX investors point to Palantir for its secular growth, high return on invested capital, good margins and asset-light composition — qualities that fans say justify the high multiples the stock commands and suggest greater opportunities down the road.

    Palantir is well known as one of the priciest stocks in the market, recently trading at 43x expected revenue and 75x earnings. Sceptics say those levels are likely unsustainable, but SpaceX fans contend that the figures show that premium valuations are attainable if backed by outstanding financial performance.

    That said, at $1.75-trillion, even Palantir would be cheaper on some of these measures than SpaceX, which would trade at 110x 2025 revenue estimates, according to a PitchBook calculation.

    ‘Platform premium’

    “Investors should size positions with the understanding that they are paying a platform premium today for infrastructure monopoly economics tomorrow,” PitchBook analyst Franco Granda said in a note last month.

    For the rocket manufacturing side of the business, SpaceX investors contend that the firm’s accomplishments – for instance, it has built a reusable launch system, driven down unit costs dramatically and expanded into a commercial market where demand for launch capacity continues to grow — demand valuations far above those prevailing at Lockheed, which traded recently at around 20x next year’s expected earnings. Boeing’s current high multiples mostly reflect its state as a turnaround story.

    Read: Privacy alarm as SpaceX opens Starlink user data to AI models

    Instead, they turn to industrial names such as GE Vernova and Vertiv — companies whose stocks have soared on the back of AI data centre spending — arguing that SpaceX’s launch operations deserve a similar re-rating to the “picks and shovels” of the data centre age.

    Even these preferred comparisons do not look a lot like SpaceX, however. GE Vernova was recently trading at around 30x expected cash flow and 4x last year’s revenue.

    Vertiv, which sells power and cooling equipment for data centres, traded recently at 19x expected operating profit and 6x last year’s sales.

    SpaceX

    Bankers and investors say SpaceX is difficult to price because of the company’s unique space operations and AI business, which is particularly difficult to value at an early stage.

    “Pricing is always going to be messy here,” said Aswath Damodaran, a valuation expert and finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “Nobody else has that capacity to launch satellites in numbers and at the price that they can do — that’s their big advantage.”

    Read: SpaceX IPO may be largest in history

    He adds that much of the current pricing reflects investors justifying their decision to purchase the shares rather than relying on traditional metrics. “They’re hoping there’s enough mood and momentum behind SpaceX, and when it goes public, the mood and momentum will take the stock up.

    “They’ve made the decision already that SpaceX is a great buy,” Damodaran said. “Now they’re looking for some way that they can justify that, and this pricing sounds like that exposed rationalisation.”  — Echo Wang, with Joey Roulette, (c) 2026 Reuters

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