The insatiable demand for a slice of Elon Musk’s spacefaring enterprise has hit fever pitch, yet the gates remain firmly shut. SpaceX, the most valuable private company in the world, continues to deny public investors a direct stake, even as secondary markets report unprecedented premiums for its shares.
For years, the company has maintained its private status, a strategic choice that shields it from quarterly earnings pressure and allows Musk to pursue audacious goals like Mars colonization. But the exclusivity has created a distorted ecosystem. On platforms like Forge Global and EquityZen, SpaceX shares trade at valuations that often exceed the company’s official $180 billion price tag, reflecting a fervour that borders on religious.
Why the clamour? Because SpaceX is not just a rocket company. It is the linchpin of modern space infrastructure. Its Starlink constellation now covers over 70 countries, its Falcon 9 rockets launch more payloads than any other vehicle, and its Starship program promises to rewrite the economics of interplanetary travel. To own a piece of SpaceX is to bet on humanity’s future off Earth. And that bet is currently only available to the ultra-wealthy, venture capital firms, and select insiders.
The irony is palpable: a company that democratizes space access through satellite internet remains itself a fortress of elitism. Public market investors are left to circle the periphery, bidding up the shares of suppliers like Maxar Technologies or speculative SPACs, none of which offer the direct exposure they crave.
Musk has occasionally dangled the carrot of an IPO, but then withdrawn it. In 2020, he said an IPO of Starlink was possible once its cash flow was predictable. Four years later, Starlink is cash-flow positive, but no IPO is on the horizon. The official line is that SpaceX’s capital needs are met by private funding rounds. The unofficial truth is that Musk dislikes the scrutiny and short-termism of public markets. He has seen how they treat Tesla shares and seems uninterested in repeating that circus.
But the secondary market inflation threatens to create a bubble. If SpaceX’s true value is distorted by scarcity, what happens when the liquidity tap finally turns on? Early investors could see a correction. Yet, for now, the demand persists because the narrative is irresistible: space is the final frontier, and SpaceX is the only taxi company.
The question is whether public investors will ever get a ride. Recent whispers from inside the company suggest a potential spin-off of Starlink as a separate publicly traded entity within the next two years. That would offer a piece of the business without exposing the entirety of SpaceX to the market’s whims. But even that remains speculative.
For the average investor, the takeaway is clear: don’t hold your breath. SpaceX’s exclusivity is a feature, not a bug. It allows Musk to operate with a freedom that public companies envy. And until that freedom is compromised, the doors will stay closed. The secondary market will continue to reflect public appetite, but ownership remains a privilege reserved for the few. In the battle between democratization and control, control is winning.








