Elon Musk just made a move that could hand everyday investors a ticket to space — a $1.75 trillion rocket to be exact… But there’s a twist no one saw coming that could change the entire stock market forever.
For over two decades, Elon Musk kept SpaceX locked away from Wall Street. While the rockets flew and Starlink satellites blanketed the sky, ordinary investors watched from the sidelines — no ticket, no access, no share of the stars.
That’s about to change. SpaceX is racing toward a Nasdaq listing as early as June 12, and when it lands, it could be the largest IPO in history — targeting a staggering $75 billion raise at a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion.
To put that in perspective: SpaceX was already valued at $1.25 trillion just months ago when it merged with Musk’s AI company xAI — the parent of Grok and social platform X. The IPO would catapult it past that, making it one of the most valuable U.S. companies ever to hit public markets in a single debut.
But this isn’t just a money story. SpaceX’s filing reads more like a manifesto. References to asteroid mining, lunar energy production, and permanent human settlements on Mars sit alongside hard financial data. Musk isn’t selling a company — he’s selling a civilization.
The timing is no accident. On May 22, Starship — the world’s largest rocket at 407 feet — completed its 12th flight test from South Texas in what analysts called a pivotal success. Fully reusable deep-space missions are no longer science fiction. They’re a balance sheet item.
Meanwhile, a CNBC report dropped a bombshell: Musk has floated the idea of merging SpaceX with Tesla. Employees at the electric vehicle giant already expect it. If it happens, the combined entity would rewrite the rules of American industry entirely.
The countdown has begun. The question isn’t whether SpaceX will make history — it’s whether you’ll be on board when it does.


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