The news is out. SpaceX, the privately held darling of the aerospace industry, has finally filed for its initial public offering. The prospectus, a dense tome of financial projections and risk factors, landed on my desk this morning with a thud that echoed through the London trading floor. The headlines scream “employee number one” and praise from British space analysts about the UK’s launchpad role. But let's cut through the celestial romanticism. This is a capital event, and we must examine it with the cold, hard eye of a bond trader watching gilt yields spike.
First, the numbers. The rumoured valuation is eye-watering. We are talking north of $150 billion. That would make it one of the largest IPOs in history, dwarfing even the most hyped tech listings of the last decade. The question every fund manager in the City is asking is simple: does the price reflect the underlying economics or just the Elon Musk premium? The man is a genius, a visionary, and a master of capital allocation. But he also has a habit of over-promising and under-delivering on timelines. The Starship program, for all its audacity, is years behind schedule. Starlink, while a brilliant idea, is still burning cash as it builds out its constellation. The balance sheet, from what we can glean from the filing, is a mix of government contracts, commercial launch revenue, and a mountain of future expectations.
Now, the UK angle. The government and various space analysts are touting the UK’s role as a launchpad for SpaceX. Cornwall? Sutherland? The idea that Britain is a key hub for a US-based company is being spun as a victory for “Global Britain”. But let’s be realistic. The UK’s space industry is a minnow compared to the US and China. We provide a nice launch site for polar orbits, but the real action is in Boca Chica and Cape Canaveral. The City is not going to suddenly shift its investment thesis based on a few launches from Shetland. The real story for UK investors is whether they can get a piece of the action. The IPO is expected to be heavily oversubscribed, and retail investors will be lucky to get a sliver. The institutions will hoover up the shares, and the volatility will be extreme.
Market volatility is my obsession. Look at the broader context. Inflation is still stubbornly above target. The Bank of England is stuck between a rock and a hard place: raise rates further and choke off growth, or hold steady and risk runaway prices. Gilt yields have been whipsawing as the market tries to price in the next move. Into this environment, we inject a high-growth, high-risk stock like SpaceX. It is a perfect storm for speculation. The hedge funds will love it. They can short the volatility, play the gamma, and extract value from the chaos. The pension funds will have to be more circumspect. They cannot load up on a single name with no earnings and a huge debt load. Fiduciary duty demands prudence. The IPO will be a test of market discipline. Will the institutions resist the hype, or will they pile in for fear of missing out?
I am inherently sceptical of government involvement in markets. The UK government, through the UK Space Agency, has been handing out grants and subsidies to encourage private sector investment. That is taxpayer money being used to de-risk private enterprise. It is a form of industrial policy that I find deeply troubling. If SpaceX is truly a viable business, it should not need government handouts. The IPO will be the ultimate test: if the market believes in the valuation, the company should have no trouble raising capital. But if the VCs and early employees are cashing out, as they always do, then the retail investor is left holding the bag. The “employee number one” narrative is just a marketing ploy. The real story is the wealth transfer from public markets to private insiders.
Finally, the macro picture. Capital flight is a real concern. UK investors are already looking abroad for yield and growth. The US markets offer liquidity and innovation that the London Stock Exchange cannot match. The SpaceX IPO will likely be listed on the NASDAQ, not the LSE. That is a missed opportunity for the City. It speaks to the structural issues in our own capital markets. We need to ask ourselves why the next generation of high-growth companies chooses to list elsewhere. Until we fix the regulatory environment and the tax treatment of equity, we will continue to see our best opportunities flee across the Atlantic.
In summary, the SpaceX IPO is a landmark event. It is a test of market sentiment, a referendum on government industrial policy, and a mirror reflecting our own capital market deficiencies. I will be watching the order book and the first day of trading with my usual cynicism. The hype is intoxicating, but the bottom line is what matters. And the bottom line for SpaceX is still very much in the red.









