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  3. /How much money did Elon Musk make in SpaceX’s stock market debut?
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How much money did Elon Musk make in SpaceX’s stock market debut?

The Guardian World1h ago5 min readOriginal source →
How much money did Elon Musk make in SpaceX’s stock market debut?

TL;DR

Elon Musk became the world's first trillionaire following SpaceX's IPO, which raised $75bn and valued the company at $2.1tn. His personal fortune increased by over $62bn to $1.1tn after the stock market debut.

Key points

  • Elon Musk became the world's first trillionaire
  • SpaceX raised $75bn in its IPO
  • SpaceX's valuation reached $2.1tn after debut
  • Musk's net worth increased to $1.1tn
  • SpaceX's share price rose 19% on the first day

Mentioned in this story

Elon MuskSpaceX

Why it matters

Elon Musk's unprecedented wealth highlights the immense financial impact of successful tech IPOs in today's economy.

Elon Musk is now the world’s first trillionaire. SpaceX’s historic debut on the stock market on Friday launched the CEO to unprecedented levels of wealth; his personal fortune now amounts to $1.1tn, an increase of more than $62 bn since the previous day, according to Forbes.

The rocket, satellite and AI company raised $75bn from its record-breaking initial public offering (IPO), and is now valued at $2.1tn after its first day of public trading.

Musk was already the world’s wealthiest person. In the days before SpaceX officially went public, his net worth hit $782bn, dropping by $50bn in one month due to a decline in Tesla’s share price, according to Forbes. However, the figure represents a huge leap from a decade ago, when the tech executive’s net worth hovered around $14bn – and an even bigger jump compared with 15 years earlier, when he was worth just $680m, according to Forbes.

It can be hard to conceptualize such exorbitant wealth. To drive home just how much money $1.1tn is: only about 21 countries’ yearly economic output exceeds $1tn. Even Musk’s birthplace isn’t part of that elite club; South Africa’s output of goods and service is closer to $480 bn. A trillion dollars is enough to buy 243bn gallons of gasoline. (That’s more than the nearly 137bn gallons Americans used last year.)

SpaceX’s stock soared after its debut. At market close, at 4pm ET, its share price was $161, up 19% from its initial price of $135 per share. SpaceX had opened at $150 a share before peaking at $176 at midday.

The vast majority of Musk’s money is tied up in stocks and equity, and isn’t available as cash he can quickly spend. His portfolio of companies includes Tesla, the electric car maker, and xAI, the AI startup that was folded into SpaceX earlier this year.

Q&A

How much did Elon Musk's net worth increase after SpaceX's IPO?

Elon Musk's net worth increased by more than $62 billion to reach $1.1 trillion after SpaceX's IPO.

What was SpaceX's valuation after its first day of trading?

SpaceX was valued at $2.1 trillion after its first day of public trading.

What was the initial share price of SpaceX during its IPO?

SpaceX's initial share price during its IPO was set at $135 per share.

How much money did SpaceX raise in its initial public offering?

SpaceX raised $75 billion from its record-breaking initial public offering.

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See every story in News — including breaking news and analysis.

At a glance

  • Elon Musk became the world's first trillionaire
  • SpaceX raised $75bn in its IPO
  • SpaceX's valuation reached $2.1tn after debut
  • Musk's net worth increased to $1.1tn
  • SpaceX's share price rose 19% on the first day

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Musk’s fortune is unprecedented, not just for its size but the speed at which it grew.

“If you look at a graph, it looks like a hockey stick. It’s only in 2020 that his personal net worth truly went bonkers,” says Quinn Slobodian, a history professor at Boston University and the author of Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed. Around 2020 was when Musk first became the world’s wealthiest person and Tesla the world’s most valuable car company.

“Musk has a proven track record in creating sectors out of nothing,” Slobodian says. There’s a sense to “never bet against Elon – he’ll always make you money”, he adds.

Musk’s AI gamble

A few months before SpaceX’s stock market debut, Musk wrapped his AI startup, xAI, into SpaceX in a record-breaking deal. SpaceX has proposed launching up to 1m datacenters into space, as part of its ultimate goal of establishing colonies on the moon and Mars.

This lean into AI is what’s allowed Musk to claim such high valuation for SpaceX – because many investors now believe “AI is such a once-in-a-millennium opportunity that it merits these extravagant expectations”, says Mihir Desai, a professor at Harvard Business School. Desai says the space business alone wouldn’t have generated such excitement.

SpaceX is running up billions of dollars in losses, and its prospectus warns it may never become profitable. Many great businesses start off losing money but “the real question is how people come to believe that the future is so, so bright that those losses will not just turn into profits, but will turn into really massive profits”, Desai says. “That’s a story about not just SpaceX, but really about AI.”

Musk’s strong track record

Musk has won investor confidence through the stratospheric success of his previous endeavors, which faced serious doubts. (A $10,000 investment in Tesla on the day of its IPO, in 2010, would be worth more than $2m this year.)

Desai describes Musk’s most loyal investors as belonging to a “financial cult” – and argues they believe he is “so damn brilliant that he’ll make it work even if the current product is crap and he has to spend a lot to get there”.

The AI portion of SpaceX lost $6.4bn last year – in part due to the cost of higher computing expenses for building and operating AI models. But investors may fear missing out more than they fear losses: “You don’t want to sit on the sidelines. And so even if you think it’s crazy, you have to play,” Desai says.

Musk is also able to consolidate his wealth through his continuing influence. He is not selling any of his shares in the SpaceX offering and will retain more than 82% of the company’s voting shares. That means it will be almost impossible to unseat him from the company, and he will be relatively insulated from shareholder pressure.

SpaceX’s IPO comes amid recent announcements by OpenAI and Anthropic that they are going public, although it’s unclear when exactly they will do so. All three companies’ fates are tied up with AI.

If the AI gamble doesn’t work out, “people are going to start to get cold feet and withdraw their investments”, Slobodian says. “This is not an ironclad fortune. We may see the world’s first trillionaire be the world’s first former trillionaire in a pretty short duration.”