In a move that has sent ripples through the City, a SpaceX co-founder (not Elon Musk, but a lesser-known figure) has publicly praised British engineering talent following the company’s historic market debut. The listing, which valued the private space firm at a staggering $180bn, has reignited debates about fiscal discipline and the role of government in innovation.
Let’s cut through the hype. This is a company that has burned through billions in capital, relying on government contracts and private speculation. The market debut, while impressive on paper, smacks of a frothy market desperate for a narrative. British engineers are undoubtedly world-class, but the real story here is the sheer amount of liquidity sloshing around the system, fuelled by central bank policies that have distorted risk pricing.
Consider the gilt market. UK government bonds have been on a rollercoaster, with yields spiking as inflation persists. The Bank of England’s tightening cycle has done little to tame the beast, and capital flight has become a persistent theme. Investors are piling into high-risk assets like SpaceX, chasing returns that traditional bonds no longer offer. This is not a vote of confidence in British engineering; it is a desperate search for yield in a world where real returns are vanishing.
The co-founder’s comments are a canny PR move, designed to ingratiate the company with UK regulators and potential investors. But let’s not forget the underlying fiscal reality. Government debt is at record levels, and every pound spent on subsidising space exploration is a pound not spent on infrastructure or education. The market’s enthusiasm for SpaceX is a symptom of a broader malaise: a misallocation of capital driven by central bank overreach.
I am reminded of the tech bubble of the late 1990s. Back then, it was dot-com stocks; today, it is space ventures. The narrative is always the same: disruption, innovation, and the promise of a new frontier. But the maths does not add up. SpaceX’s valuation implies a future cash flow stream that would require conquering Mars several times over. Meanwhile, UK manufacturing languishes, and productivity growth stagnates.
To be clear, I am not denigrating British engineers. They are the unsung heroes of an economy that has shifted too far towards finance and services. But praising them in the context of a market debut is like applauding the builders of a crumbling house. The real question is: why is so much capital chasing so few productive opportunities? The answer lies in the Bank of England’s balance sheet and the government’s fiscal incontinence.
The market debut of SpaceX is a spectacle, but it is also a warning. It tells us that the economy is addicted to cheap money. And like any addiction, the withdrawal will be painful. For British investors, the message is clear: be careful what you wish for. The next few quarters will test whether this enthusiasm is founded on solid ground or on the shifting sands of monetary policy.
In the meantime, I suggest keeping an eye on gilt yields. If they continue to rise, the entire edifice of high-risk investing could come crashing down. And then, all the engineering talent in the world won’t be able to save us.












