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An IPO raising $40-80 billion is too large to be absorbed easily. It forces investment bankers to pull capital out of other assets to fund it. This creates a "giant sucking sound" in the markets, potentially causing knock-on effects in liquid assets like Treasuries or competitor stocks like Tesla.
SpaceX is targeting a monumental $1.75T IPO valuation that cannot be justified by its current financials. The strategy relies on Elon Musk's powerful narrative-building and his history of achieving seemingly impossible goals, framing the IPO as a controlled liquidity event rather than a price discovery based on fundamentals.
The capital for upcoming mega-IPOs from companies like SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic will not come from the sidelines. It will be reallocated from existing public tech companies, causing their price-to-earnings multiples to shrink as investors realize the new AI-native companies will erode their moats and capture future value.
A few massive, highly anticipated IPOs like SpaceX are expected to absorb tens of billions in investor capital. This concentration of demand creates a difficult environment for smaller tech companies, as mutual funds and other large investors have a finite capacity for new stocks, crowding out other contenders.
The enormous private valuations of AI giants like OpenAI ($1T) and SpaceX ($1.5T) pose a unique challenge for their eventual IPOs. The problem isn't the valuation itself, but the 'float.' A standard 15% float would require public markets to absorb hundreds of billions of dollars, far exceeding even the largest IPOs in history.
By offering only a small fraction of its shares ($75B out of a trillion-dollar valuation), SpaceX is creating a supply-demand imbalance. This classic IPO strategy forces index funds and institutional investors to buy into a potential price bubble, risking significant losses when more shares eventually hit the market.
The massive wave of pending tech IPOs resembles a Thanksgiving dinner where investors' 'appetite' for risk is limited. Companies like SpaceX that go public first will benefit most. Subsequent companies face increasing risk as investor capital gets allocated and market capacity to absorb trillions in new equity runs out.
SpaceX is reportedly targeting a $1.5 trillion IPO to raise $30 billion. This capital isn't just for rockets but to fund a new AI infrastructure business: data centers in space. This represents a significant strategic shift, leveraging its launch dominance to compete in the AI compute market by acquiring massive quantities of GPUs.
For trillion-dollar private companies like SpaceX going public, the traditional 90-180 day lockup period is inadequate. The massive volume of insider shares hitting the market at once could crash the stock. Investment bankers are now designing staggered lockup releases to manage this unprecedented liquidity event.
With multiple giants like OpenAI, Anthropic, and SpaceX eyeing public offerings, there's a real concern that the market cannot absorb them all simultaneously. This creates a bottleneck, forcing companies to carefully time their IPOs to avoid cannibalizing investor demand and potentially devaluing their listings.
A theory posits that SpaceX's massive potential IPO is a "spite IPO" by Elon Musk. By raising tens of billions in the public market, he could "suck the oxygen out of the room," making it significantly harder for capital-intensive AI competitors like OpenAI and Anthropic to secure their own large funding rounds.