Elon Musk is once again rolling the dice. This time, it is not on a rocket launch or a Twitter takeover but on the ultimate financial frontier: the public markets. Reports suggest SpaceX is preparing for a blockbuster initial public offering, potentially valuing the company at a staggering $150 billion. For London investors, the news carries both allure and alarm.
Let us be clear: SpaceX is a remarkable beast. It has revolutionised space travel, slashed launch costs, and built a satellite internet empire with Starlink. Its revenue stream is growing, and its backlog of government and commercial contracts is enviable. Yet an IPO at such a sky-high valuation raises red flags for anyone who remembers the dot-com bubble or the recent SPAC mania.
The arithmetic is sobering. A $150 billion price tag implies a price-to-sales multiple of around 20 times projected 2024 revenue. For context, Tesla trades at roughly 7 times sales, and that is considered frothy by traditional metrics. SpaceX’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation are negligible, heavily reinvested in Starship and Starlink expansion. The company is a cash-burning machine, albeit with a clear path to profitability if Starlink hits its targets.
Musk, of course, is a master of narrative. He has convinced investors that SpaceX is not a transport company but a multi-planetary civilisation enabler. That narrative commands a premium, but narrative can evaporate faster than rocket fuel. The risk is that the IPO becomes a liquidity event for early investors, leaving retail investors holding the bag if revenue growth disappoints.
For London institutions, the calculation is simple: capital gains versus capital preservation. UK pension funds, battered by gilt yield volatility and inflation, are hungry for high-growth exposure but wary of valuation excess. The Bank of England’s tightening cycle has made cash and bonds more attractive, and the pound’s weakness adds another layer of currency risk for dollar-denominated assets.
Flotation on the New York Stock Exchange would be the natural home, but London could yet court the listing, dangling its reformed listing rules and deep pools of capital. However, the City’s recent track record of attracting tech IPOs is dismal. Arm Holdings chose New York; Deliveroo flopped. Musk is unlikely to favour a market that has been lukewarm on his electric car empire.
The bigger question is whether an IPO is prudent at all. SpaceX’s private funding rounds have been generous, with employees cashing out via tender offers. Going public would expose the company to quarterly earnings scrutiny and activist investors who might balk at Musk’s long-shot Mars ambitions. That is a gamble even for a habitual risk-taker.
What does this mean for the average London investor? If the IPO happens, expect a frenzy. Underwriters will price it to pop, and retail investors will scramble for allocations. My advice: approach with the same caution you would a speculative penny stock. Do your homework on Starlink’s subscriber growth, launch cadence, and government contracts. Do not buy on hype alone.
In the end, SpaceX’s float could be the most exciting IPO of the decade. Or it could be a cautionary tale, a reminder that even the loftiest rockets can crash back to earth. For now, I am watching the yield curve and waiting for the prospectus. The bottom line: this is a bet on Elon Musk’s vision, not on financial fundamentals. And that is the biggest gamble of all.










