Elon Musk has never shied away from dangerous wagers. From betting the company on a rocket that exploded three times before succeeding, to selling flamethrowers and tunnelling under Las Vegas, his playbook is littered with audacious gambles. But a public listing for SpaceX, his privately held space exploration giant, may be his most perilous move yet, coming at a moment when the artificial intelligence arms race is redrawing the rules of the global economy.
SpaceX, valued at roughly $180 billion in private markets, has long been the crown jewel of Musk’s empire. Its Starlink satellite network now provides internet to over 2 million users worldwide, and its Starship rocket promises to make interplanetary travel a reality. But going public would expose the company to quarterly earnings pressures, shareholder activism, and the sort of regulatory scrutiny that Musk has historically loathed.
“The moment SpaceX files its S-1, it becomes a different beast,” notes Dr. Helena Richter, a corporate governance expert at the London School of Economics. “Musk will have to answer to investors who care more about next quarter’s revenue than about colonising Mars. That tension could crush the very innovation that makes SpaceX remarkable.”
This tension is amplified by the accelerating race for AI dominance. Musk, who co-founded OpenAI and later left the board, has been vocal about the existential threats posed by unregulated artificial intelligence. His own AI venture, xAI, launched in July 2023, aims to “understand the true nature of the universe.” Meanwhile, competitors like Google’s DeepMind, Microsoft-backed OpenAI, and a slew of Chinese tech giants are pouring billions into large language models and quantum machine learning.
“The AI race is a sinkhole for capital,” warns Julian Vane, Technology & Innovation Lead. “Every major tech company is being forced to spend wildly on GPU clusters, talent, and energy infrastructure. SpaceX would enter the public markets at a time when investors are jittery about AI overspend, while also needing to fund its own Mars ambitions. That’s a recipe for volatility.”
A public listing would also force SpaceX to disclose its finances in detail. Currently, the company’s revenue projections from Starlink are rosy, but the service requires constant satellite replenishment. The Starship programme, meanwhile, has burned through billions with no clear path to profitability. In the public glare, Musk would need to justify these expenditures against a backdrop of rising interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty.
There is also the question of governance. Musk’s management style, described by employees as demanding and mercurial, has resulted in multiple SEC investigations and a defamation lawsuit. Public shareholders may demand more checks and balances, something Musk has resisted at Tesla, where he remains CEO despite board pressure.
“Musk has thrived on chaos,” says Vane. “But the stock market rewards stability. If SpaceX goes public, it will be forced into a straitjacket. The AI race only makes this worse, because it requires long-term bets that quarterly earnings reports punish.”
Yet, a public listing could provide the capital needed to compete in the AI arms race. SpaceX’s satellite network could form the backbone of a decentralised AI computing grid, enabling low-latency machine learning inference anywhere on Earth. Musk has hinted at using Starlink to power Tesla’s self-driving fleet, and eventually, Mars colonies. An infusion of public cash could accelerate these synergies.
“SpaceX is uniquely positioned to become the infrastructure provider for the AI economy,” argues Dr. Richter. “But to realise that vision, Musk needs to convince investors that he can balance short-term profits with long-term disruption. That’s a tough sell, especially when his Twitter acquisition is bleeding cash.”
With the AI race intensifying, regulators are also circling. The EU’s AI Act and potential US guidelines on data sovereignty could affect Starlink’s operations. Meanwhile, China’s rapid advancements in satellite technology add a geopolitical layer to the risk.
For now, Musk remains coy on timing. But sources close to the company suggest a potential IPO in 2025. If it happens, it will be a test not just of SpaceX’s valuation, but of whether markets can stomach Musk’s brand of futurism in an era of AI anxiety.
“SpaceX going public could either fund humanity’s first interplanetary civilisation or become a cautionary tale about hubris,” concludes Vane. “Either way, it will be the most closely watched listing of the decade.”








