As SpaceX prepares for its record-breaking market debut, co-founder Elon Musk has revealed the story of ‘employee number one’ – a narrative that markets will parse for signals of corporate culture and, more importantly, long-term value creation. But let’s not get carried away by nostalgia. In the cold light of the City, this is about one thing: the bottom line.
SpaceX, the darling of private capital markets, is now eyeing a public listing that could value it at over $150 billion. That is a staggering figure for a company that, until recently, was burning cash faster than a Falcon 9 on re-entry. The story of employee number one – a tale of early sacrifice and vision – is classic founder mythology. It is designed to humanise the brand and reassure investors that the company’s soul remains intact amid the inevitable bureaucracy of a public listing.
But I am sceptical. The narrative is a distraction. What matters is the balance sheet. SpaceX’s valuation already prices in a decade of flawless execution, assuming Starship becomes the world’s dominant heavy-lift vehicle and Starlink achieves monopoly-like margins. These are big ifs. The launch market is notoriously volatile, and competition from Blue Origin and China is intensifying. Meanwhile, Starlink’s capital expenditure requirements remain astronomical. Investors should be asking about free cash flow, not ‘employee number one’.
The timing of this story is telling. With the IPO looming, Musk is doing what he does best: managing expectations. He knows that a good story can inject a premium into the stock price. But for those of us who remember the dot-com bubble, stories alone do not pay dividends. They do not survive a rising interest rate environment.
Let us consider the macroeconomic backdrop. Inflation is still sticky. Gilt yields are elevated. The Bank of England and the Federal Reserve are in no mood to loosen policy. In such an environment, capital is expensive. Companies with high valuations and uncertain cash flows are vulnerable. SpaceX may be a technological marvel, but it is not immune to the laws of finance.
There is also the matter of capital flight. With geopolitical tensions simmering and tax rates likely to rise to pay for pandemic-era debts, investors are increasingly risk-averse. A space exploration company, however exciting, is not a safe haven. The market debut could be a success, but the real test will come six months later when the lock-up expires and insiders can sell. That is when the story will meet reality.
In my 20 years in the City, I have learned that the best investments are boring. They are companies with predictable earnings, strong balance sheets, and a moat. SpaceX is not boring. It is exciting. And excitement, in my experience, often leads to irrational exuberance. The story of employee number one is charming, but it is no substitute for fiscal responsibility.
So, as we watch the SpaceX IPO, let us keep our eyes on the data. Revenue per launch. Cost per kilogram to orbit. Starlink subscriber growth. These are the metrics that matter, not the founder’s anecdotes. The market’s verdict on this listing will be a test of whether we have learned the lessons of history or are destined to repeat them.










