The City has its eyes on the Cape this morning. SpaceX, Elon Musk’s private juggernaut, is preparing for a stock market debut that promises to be the most speculative capital event since the South Sea Bubble. But this time, the froth is laced with rocket fuel and regulatory defiance.
Let us be clear: the company’s valuation, whispered to be north of $150 billion, is not based on earnings. It is based on dreams. Dreams of Martian colonies, global satellite internet monopolies, and a regulatory environment that bends like a reed in a hurricane. Mr Musk, never one for the slow grind of compliance, has chosen to list amid a flurry of Federal Aviation Administration fines and investigations into his Starship programme. The message to investors: trust me, not the rules.
This is a classic gamble on the ‘Musk premium’. The man who turned Tesla into a $700 billion car company with a fraction of Toyota’s output now asks the market to believe he can do the same for space. And the market, hungry for yield in a world of sub-4% gilts, is salivating. But the sceptic in me sees capital flight waiting to happen. When the next FAA grounding hits, or a Starship blows up over the Gulf, the herd will stampede for the exit. And there will be no central bank put for private space assets.
Fiscal responsibility is a foreign concept here. SpaceX burns cash at a prodigious rate, funding R&D through private placements that hide the true cost from public scrutiny. Once the accounts go public, the transparency will be a cold shower. Expect write-downs. Expect volatility. The SEC will have its pound of flesh.
Yet the market’s obsession with ‘disruption’ makes this a near-certain success in the short term. Institutional investors, starved of growth in a low-inflation environment, will pile in. The IPO will be oversubscribed a hundred times. But for the long-term investor, this is a binary bet on one man’s ability to outrun the law of gravity. I am not betting the house.
In the end, it is a textbook case of market inefficiency: pricing in a future that may never arrive. The bottom line? Buy the rumour, sell the reality. Or better yet, watch from the sidelines with a stiff gin.









