How SpaceX stacks up against some of the biggest US IPOs


The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket booster is shown outside the company’s facility in Hawthorne California, U.S., April 23, 2026. REUTERS/Mike Blake

May 15 (Reuters) - ⁠SpaceX is targeting a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion ⁠in its upcoming initial public offering, in what ‌could be the biggest-ever stock market debut by a U.S. company on Wall Street.

The listing of Elon Musk-led SpaceX could easily dwarf ​many of the biggest U.S. IPOs ⁠on record, including those ⁠of Alibaba, Visa and Facebook, now Meta Platforms, which analysts ⁠say ‌reflects high growth expectations from the rocket and satellite company that it may struggle to ⁠meet.

The charts below compare SpaceX with high-profile market ​debuts of ‌the past on valuation and fundamentals.

Some of these companies ⁠entered public ​markets with larger revenue bases and clearer profit profiles. Analysts say SpaceX's proposed valuation reflects in part how much ⁠investors are being asked to pay ​for future growth.

"All of these companies have had a compelling story for why rapid growth and big future profits might ⁠happen. But when a company goes public at such a high valuation, lots of things have to go right," said Jay Ritter, a University of Florida professor ​who tracks U.S. IPOs.

"Revenue has to ⁠grow enormously, and costs have to grow more slowly. Most ​of the time, things don't go ‌according to plan."

(Reporting by Shashwat ​Chauhan in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Johann M Cherian, editing by Colin Barr and Shinjini Ganguli)

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