SpaceX eyes $1.75 trillion IPO filing as soon as March
SpaceX is reportedly preparing a confidential SEC draft filing for an IPO in March, targeting a valuation above $1.75 trillion and a possible June listing, Bloomberg reports.

SpaceX is reportedly planning to file confidentially for an initial public offering as soon as March, aiming for a valuation exceeding $1.75 trillion and setting a target for a June listing, according to reporting by Bloomberg and Reuters. Bloomberg Law says the Starbase, Texas-based firm expects to submit a draft IPO registration to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in March, citing people familiar with the matter.
The Bloomberg article, credited to Bailey Lipschultz, Ryan Gould, Kiel Porter and Eric Johnson, frames the move as potentially the largest technology offering in history and the first of what Bloomberg Law described as "a trio of mega-IPOs," with OpenAI and Anthropic PBC named as possible follow-ons. Reuters, citing Bloomberg and unnamed people familiar with the matter, carried the development in a dispatch by Juby Babu in Mexico City, edited by Tasim Zahid. MarketScreener aggregated the reports and logged publication and modification timestamps on Feb. 27, 2026 at 03:32 pm and 03:35 pm Eastern.
If realized, a float at that valuation would reshape public markets for aerospace and satellite companies and concentrate substantial private wealth into public hands. Bloomberg Law cautioned that "considerations are ongoing, details could change ..." and the reporting notes that the account rests on unnamed sources; neither SpaceX nor Elon Musk provided public comment in the pieces cited.
Beyond market mechanics, the scale of a SpaceX listing raises immediate questions about local and regional impacts that have not been addressed in the available reporting. Starbase, the Texas hub Bloomberg Law cites, has been the epicenter of the company’s test launches and associated infrastructure growth. A multi-trillion-dollar public offering could alter local economic dynamics, from housing and public services to labor markets, yet the sources do not specify how proceeds would be used, which legal entity would file the registration, or what underwriting banks might lead the deal.

Public health, environmental and equity implications are likewise unsettled in the current reports. The filings described in the Bloomberg excerpts do not detail any assessments of environmental review, community health monitoring or plans to direct investor returns toward workforce development or regional healthcare needs. Reporters and regulators will face choices about what disclosures are required and how downstream effects on lower-income and frontline communities near Starbase should be measured.
Several key facts remain open: the exact filing vehicle, the share count and price range, whether the confidential submission will use available SEC mechanisms, and whether any national security or export-control considerations would shape the offering. Journalists and policymakers will also watch whether the draft submission in March stays on a course toward the June listing Bloomberg Law sketches or shifts as underwriting and market conditions evolve.
The reporting so far places SpaceX at the center of a potential market-defining event. As details emerge, community advocates, public health officials and market regulators will need timely disclosures to assess how a landmark IPO might affect local infrastructure, equitable distribution of economic gains and long-term public commitments tied to rapid expansion in the commercial space sector.
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