SpaceX is moving quickly toward a blockbuster stock-market debut, with a June 2026 listing coming into focus after a confidential filing and fresh public signals from CEO Elon Musk. The offering could be the year’s marquee market event — and a stress test for newly updated index rules and investor appetite for mega-cap listings.
On April 1, 2026, Bloomberg reported that SpaceX confidentially submitted its draft registration to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, a step that puts the company on track for a June listing if market conditions hold. Musk underscored the momentum on May 18, saying he wants to get the IPO underway “pretty soon,” according to Bloomberg. AP separately reported that SpaceX has filed initial paperwork to sell shares to the public, positioning the float to be among the largest on record.
Beyond the headline-grabbing rockets, SpaceX now spans satellite internet and artificial intelligence — a breadth that helps explain the eye-watering sums being discussed. Bloomberg has reported internal and investor conversations around a potential valuation north of $2 trillion, which would make this one of the biggest market debuts ever. The scale alone suggests heavy interest from both retail buyers and institutions, but it also raises familiar questions about governance, execution risk and post-IPO volatility for companies closely linked to high-profile founders.
Nasdaq in late March approved updates to the Nasdaq-100 methodology that took effect on May 1, 2026. Under the change, newly public mega-caps can be evaluated for inclusion roughly within their first few weeks of trading, rather than waiting months. That faster path into a major index could accelerate passive fund flows into any newly listed heavyweight — potentially amplifying early trading swings, for better or worse. Investors will also be watching for the public prospectus and roadshow details, which should clarify Starlink’s growth profile, capital needs for Starship, and how AI ambitions fit into the broader business. As always with blockbuster offerings, timelines can shift.