The City of London is watching with a mixture of envy and alarm as SpaceX prepares for a stock market debut that could value Elon Musk’s rocket company at a staggering $250bn. This is not just a story about one man and his interplanetary ambitions; it is a stark reminder of how far behind the London Stock Exchange has fallen in the race for high-growth listings.
For years, I have warned that the LSE is losing its edge. The flow of tech unicorns to US exchanges is now a flood. SpaceX, a private company that has already demonstrated the ability to disrupt the aerospace industry, is the ultimate prize. Its listing will be a test of whether Musk’s empire can withstand the scrutiny of public markets – and whether London can ever compete for the next generation of space-age companies.
The numbers are eye-watering. SpaceX’s valuation has ballooned on the back of Starlink’s broadband success and the Starship programme. But let’s be clear: this is a high-risk venture. The company’s capital-intensive projects require constant injections of cash, and Musk’s management style is famously unpredictable. Investors will be betting not just on technology, but on the man himself. That should give any prudent fund manager pause.
Yet the real story here is the capital flight from London. We have seen it before: ARM Holdings crossed the Atlantic for a Nasdaq listing. Now, the fear is that other British tech stars might follow suit. The London market is becoming a backwater for staid industries – banks, miners, utilities – while the dynamic growth companies seek liquidity elsewhere.
The government talks a good game about boosting UK competitiveness, but the regulatory environment remains cumbersome. The FCA’s listing rules are still seen as too restrictive for founders who want to retain control. A dual-class share structure? Good luck getting that past the regulators without a fight. Meanwhile, Nasdaq and the NYSE are rolling out the red carpet for anyone with a promising rocket ship.
Let’s also consider the macroeconomic backdrop. Inflation is stubbornly high, gilt yields are rising, and the Bank of England is caught between a rock and a hard place. If UK interest rates stay elevated, the cost of capital for new listings becomes prohibitive. Companies will naturally be drawn to the US, where venture capital is plentiful and the appetite for risk is greater.
I would like to see the LSE embrace a more aggressive strategy. That means simplifying the listing process, embracing dual-class structures with proper safeguards, and marketing London as a hub for deep-tech and space industries. But I am not holding my breath. The inertia is palpable.
Musk’s empire is a tale of two strategies. On one hand, he has built a company that is redefining space travel. On the other, his erratic tweets and legal battles should be a cautionary tale for any institutional investor. The SpaceX IPO will be a fascinating test of whether the market can separate the man from the mission.
For the City, the lesson is clear: if London cannot attract a company like SpaceX, it risks becoming a museum of 20th-century industries. The next generation of investors will take their capital to where the action is. That means competing on terms that play to our strengths – a deep pool of pension fund capital, a respected legal system, and a time zone that bridges East and West. But we must act now, or watch the rockets launch without us.








