Elon Musk's space exploration company SpaceX is reportedly preparing to go public with a potential valuation exceeding $1.75 trillion. The rocket and satellite firm could file confidentially for its initial public offering as early as March, according to Bloomberg News.

Elon Musk’s space exploration venture SpaceX is reportedly preparing to go public with a potential company valuation that could exceed $1.75 trillion, according to a Bloomberg News report released Friday.
The aerospace manufacturer may submit confidential paperwork for its initial public offering as early as next month, sources familiar with the plans told Bloomberg. Such a move would position the company among the most valuable public stock debuts in market history.
However, the timeline remains fluid, and SpaceX may choose to postpone its public listing, the report noted.
Previous Reuters reporting suggested a June IPO timeline was probable, making a March confidential filing consistent with that schedule.
The Texas-based space company, headquartered in Brownsville, reportedly earned approximately $8 billion in profits from revenues ranging between $15 billion and $16 billion during the previous year, according to sources cited by Reuters last month.
SpaceX has not yet provided a response to requests for comment regarding the IPO speculation.
The company completed its purchase of Musk’s artificial intelligence venture xAI earlier this year through an all-stock transaction, creating a combined business entity worth $1.25 trillion, according to individuals with knowledge of the deal.
Market observers anticipate a robust year for initial public offerings, with SpaceX joining other high-value technology companies like OpenAI and Anthropic in considering potential stock market debuts that could break records in 2026.
Meanwhile, Musk plans to conduct a test flight of an upgraded Starship rocket variant in March, featuring hundreds of engineering improvements. The launch will end a several-month pause while the company addressed technical issues with the next-generation spacecraft.
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