The UK’s technology minister has described SpaceX’s long-awaited market debut as a ‘strategic blow’ to its competitors, a characterisation that says more about the government’s appetite for space-aged growth than the company’s balance sheet. Elon Musk’s space venture finally floated on public markets yesterday, and the City is still digesting the implications.
Let’s get the numbers straight first. SpaceX opened at $98 per share, valuing the rocket-and-satellite behemoth at roughly $180 billion. By the close, it had surged 8 per cent. That puts its price-to-earnings ratio somewhere north of 200. Astronomical, one might say. But markets are not pricing in current profits. They are betting on a monopoly in low-Earth orbit and a future where internet access is a utility controlled by one man’s whims.
The tech minister’s comments are interesting. He called it a ‘strategic blow’, presumably to the likes of Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and the European ArianeGroup. He’s not wrong. SpaceX has upended the old aerospace model. Reusable rockets, vertical integration, and a founder who treats government contracts as an inconvenience rather than a lifeline. The market debut gives it access to even more cheap capital to crush its rivals.
But let’s not get carried away. The minister’s job is to cheerlead for British tech. Yet the real story here is capital flight. The London Stock Exchange is watching another trophy asset list in New York. How many more British pension funds will pour money into US space stocks instead of domestic infrastructure? The government talks about ‘Global Britain’ but the cash is still flowing west.
Then there is the fiscal angle. The UK taxpayer has indirectly subsidised SpaceX through Nasa contracts. Now those same taxpayers, via pension funds, will be buying shares at a frothy valuation. It is a neat transfer of wealth from the public purse to a private Mars enthusiast. Central banks should be worried about asset bubbles, but they are too busy fighting inflation to notice.
Gilt yields are another matter. If SpaceX’s IPO soaks up investor demand, it takes pressure off government borrowing costs. A strong equity market reduces the appeal of bonds. But the flipside is that it crowds out risk capital for smaller UK firms. The Treasury should be watching this closely. We are funding American moonshots while our own tech sector struggles to scale.
Competitors are already crying foul. Boeing’s Starliner programme is years behind schedule and billions over budget. ArianeGroup is stuck with non-reusable tech. They will argue that SpaceX’s valuation is a speculative bubble. They have a point. But the market is a voting machine, not a weighing machine. For now, the votes are for Musk.
The real test will come when interest rates normalise. SpaceX carries hefty debt from its Starlink expansion. If the Fed and the Bank of England keep hiking, the cost of capital will bite. That is when the ‘strategic blow’ could become a strategic wound.
For now, the City is bullish. Brokers are issuing ‘buy’ ratings with reckless abandon. The old guard of aerospace is in for a painful decade. And the UK government, desperate for a growth story, will continue to wave the space flag. Let’s just hope the taxpayers who are indirectly funding this adventure understand the risks. From my desk, it looks like another short-term thrill with long-term consequences.








