SpaceX will disclose earnings and news only on its website and X
SpaceX said earnings and major updates will go only to its own site and X, a move that could narrow access just as its IPO swells to $85.7 billion.
SpaceX is taking control of its public voice at the same moment it is becoming far more visible to investors. The company said it will release quarterly and annual financial results, along with other material news, only through its own website and its X account, bypassing the wire services that most public companies use to reach investors and journalists at the same time.
That shift matters because wire distribution has long been the default mechanism for broad disclosure in the United States. Companies routinely rely on Business Wire, PR Newswire and similar services to make sure earnings, filings and major corporate announcements land everywhere at once. SpaceX is moving in the other direction, concentrating its updates on platforms it controls, especially X, which is also owned by Elon Musk.

The company’s investor-relations page already looks like a central disclosure hub. It includes tabs labeled Investor Updates, Quarterly and Annual Reports, SEC Filings, and Events & Presentations. On June 11, 2026, that page showed the company’s initial public offering priced at $135.00 a share and said the offering had closed with the underwriters’ overallotment option fully exercised. The financials section also lists a June 11 effectiveness order and a June 12, 2026 424B4 prospectus filing.

The disclosure policy lands as SpaceX’s market debut has become one of the most closely watched in the United States. The company had already sold 555,555,555 shares at $135 each, and the exercise of the 83,333,333-share overallotment option brought the total to 638,888,888 shares. That lifted proceeds from $75 billion to $85.7 billion, a scale that puts the offering among the largest in history and intensifies scrutiny of how SpaceX communicates with shareholders and the public.
For investors, the decision raises a basic access question: does a company that is no longer private in the old sense owe its audience the broadest possible dissemination, or only the channels it chooses to own? SpaceX’s answer is clear for now. Material updates will flow through its site and X, a structure that may suit Musk’s preference for direct communication but also sets a precedent that other companies could be tempted to follow.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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