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More takeaways from an S-1 for the ages

Extending our consciousness, one risk factor at a time
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{"text":[[{"start":5.95,"text":"SpaceX publicly filed its S-1 registration statement last week for what is expected to the largest-ever IPO by a wide margin. The company is reportedly targeting a $75bn equity-raise at a $1.75tn valuation when it lists on 12 June. Less than $12bn has so far been invested in SpaceX’s equity."}],[{"start":29.849999999999998,"text":"SpaceX says its mission is “to extend the light of consciousness to the stars” and in that spirit Alphaville took another look at the prospectus. After all, it runs close to 400 pages once you include the appendices, so we couldn’t cover everything last week. Here are a few things that stood out to me: "}],[{"start":48.2,"text":"TAM-tasy"}],[{"start":49.5,"text":"Right out of the gate, SpaceX makes what must be the most ambitious market-sizing claim ever in an IPO filing. "}],[{"start":56.65,"text":"The company says it has “identified the largest actionable total addressable market in human history” — a quantified TAM of $28.5tn, excluding China and Russia."}],[{"start":null,"text":"

🚬😮‍💨
"}],[{"start":67.9,"text":"Now, IPO prospectuses have been known to contain . . . aspirational TAMs. Companies often commission or cite external studies from third-party firms such as IDC, Gartner or Forrester to lend TAM estimates at least some credibility. "}],[{"start":84.30000000000001,"text":"SpaceX cites the Digital Cooperation Organization — an organisation (with which we’re sadly totally unfamiliar) founded in 2020 by Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait and Pakistan — for its $22.7tn estimate of the enterprise applications market. "}],[{"start":102.25000000000001,"text":"In other words, nearly 80 per cent of the stated TAM relates to markets in which SpaceX does not currently operate, based on research from an obscure organisation of which the neither the United States nor any European country (other than Greece and Cyprus) is a member state."}],[{"start":117.45000000000002,"text":"Flexible lock-up"}],[{"start":119.20000000000002,"text":"Most IPOs impose a 180-day lock-up on its shareholders, meaning they have to wait for the stock price to season over six months before they can monetise their holdings. SpaceX has chosen a staggered release structure. "}],[{"start":132.95000000000002,"text":"After the company reports its first quarterly earnings, insiders will be able to sell up to 20 per cent of eligible shares, with another 10 per cent becoming available if the stock trades at least 30 per cent above the IPO price. Additional tranches of roughly 7 per cent unlock on days 70, 90, 105, 120 and 135. Musk and certain large investors remain locked up for 366 days."}],[{"start":160.8,"text":"On one level, this is sensible. Traditional lock-up expiries often create cliff-edge supply shocks as short sellers position ahead of a large wave of stock hitting the market. A phased structure should smooth out some of that volatility. "}],[{"start":174.8,"text":"Still, it’s difficult to ignore the broader context. Early investors are sitting on well over $1tn in unrealised gains, and even relatively late-stage shareholders are reportedly up more than 10 times. The valuation has risen more than sixfold in the past year. "}],[{"start":192.4,"text":"When you combine shorter-than-standard lock-up and the likelihood of accelerated inclusion in the Nasdaq 100 and potentially the S&P 500, then it becomes apparent that this IPO affords the opportunity for investors to exit into retail and index flow and so realise generational-wealth windfall gains."}],[{"start":212.20000000000002,"text":"There’s nothing inherently improper about that, but the willingness of index providers to amend their rules means the ultimate buyers extend beyond the usual group of consenting adults. When a shorter-than-standard lock-up intersects with fast-track index inclusion, the offering begins to look like a way to engineer exit liquidity for early shareholders."}],[{"start":232.25000000000003,"text":"Bankers’ self-help"}],[{"start":233.70000000000002,"text":"The five joint bookrunners — Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan — alongside additional bookrunners including Barclays, Deutsche Bank, RBC, UBS and Wells Fargo, are also lenders on a $20bn bridge loan SpaceX signed in March to refinance high-yield debt tied to X and xAI."}],[{"start":255.9,"text":"The facility matures in September, roughly halves annual interest costs, and — this is the kicker — requires IPO proceeds to be used to repay the loan within six months."}],[{"start":266.7,"text":"In other words, the lead banks also have a direct financial interest in making sure it succeeds that goes beyond the underwriting fees they would earn from the offering."}],[{"start":274.95,"text":"You see these kinds of arrangements from time to time, and there’s nothing shady or improper about it as long as the relationships are properly disclosed. Still, an offering designed to provide liquidity for early shareholders and to enable the banks to move risk off their balance sheet lacks some of the romance implied by talk of “extending consciousness to the stars”."}],[{"start":297.59999999999997,"text":"Starlink is a fine business, but AI is a cash incinerator"}],[{"start":302.15,"text":"If we strip away the sci-fi rhetoric, there is a real business here — and it’s called Starlink."}],[{"start":308.7,"text":"The connectivity division generated $11.4bn in revenue in 2025, up 50 per cent year on year, with a 39 per cent operating margin and a 63 per cent EBITDA margin. As of March 2026, Starlink had 10.3 million subscribers across 164 countries and operated roughly 9,600 satellites in low-Earth orbit. Excellent numbers, although average revenue per subscriber has fallen from $99 three years ago to $66 today. SpaceX has also launched more than 80 per cent of all global payload every year since 2023."}],[{"start":349.5,"text":"The problem is everything else in the company is consuming cash at an extraordinary pace."}],[{"start":354.55,"text":"The AI division — created after SpaceX completed its all-stock acquisition of Elon Musk’s xAI in February 2026, including X, formerly Twitter — lost $6.4bn on $3.2bn of revenue last year. In the first quarter of 2026 alone, the segment posted a $2.47bn loss on $818mn of revenue and account for around three-quarters of SpaceX’s $10.1bn of first-quarter capex. That’s an annual capex run-rate of $31bn, which is well over twice the $12.7bn total from 2025. "}],[{"start":395.7,"text":"The consolidated picture makes for rough viewing: $18.7bn in 2025 revenue, a $4.94bn net loss, and an accumulated deficit of $41.3bn. "}],[{"start":409.5,"text":"You have no say"}],[{"start":411.6,"text":"The governance structure is straightforward enough. After the IPO, Musk will control 94 per cent of the Class B shares, which carry 10-to-1 voting rights over the Class A shares being sold to the public. That translates into roughly 85 per cent of total voting control."}],[{"start":429.40000000000003,"text":"SpaceX will also rely on Nasdaq’s controlled-company exemptions, which means no need for a majority of independent directors or for independent compensation and nominating committees. And it will be hard to sue, too, due to bylaw provisions on derivative actions, mandatory arbitrations, and waiver of the right to file a class-action lawsuit."}],[{"start":450.05,"text":"Public shareholders, in practical terms, will have no influence. If investors disagree with management decisions, their only recourse option is to sell the stock. "}],[{"start":460.55,"text":"That alone is not necessarily disqualifying. Investors have made enormous amounts of money backing founder-controlled companies. But this takes the Trust me ethos to the next level yet."}],[{"start":472,"text":"Space is a tough place to do business"}],[{"start":475.05,"text":"The risk section runs 38 pages. Some of the disclosures are unintentionally funny. The company notes that “in-orbit manufacturing, passenger transport to the Moon, an established human presence or gateway hub on the Moon, passenger and cargo transport to Mars, energy production on the Moon or Mars, manufacturing capabilities on the Moon or Mars, and asteroid mining do not exist today.” "}],[{"start":499.90000000000003,"text":"As we used to say when I was growing up in New Jersey: Duh!"}],[{"start":504.1,"text":"The filing also acknowledges that orbital data centres involve “significant technical complexity and unproven technologies” and “in the harsh and unpredictable environment of space” face “a wide and unique range of space-related risks.” You get the point. As Warrant Officer Ripley could tell you, in space no one can hear you scream."}],[{"start":524.4,"text":"The bottom line"}],[{"start":526.5,"text":"SpaceX is expected to offer stock at roughly 100 times 2025 revenue — a valuation multiple with little precedent, and one that requires numerous leaps of faith around both the AI and space theses."}],[{"start":539.8,"text":"Investors participating in the IPO will be financing execution that has not yet even started to happen, facilitating the lucrative exit of pre-IPO shareholders, ceding any meaningful levers of control, and enabling underwriting banks to de-risk the exposure they had taken on to secure the IPO mandate in the first place."}],[{"start":559.3,"text":"None of that means that the stock won’t pop on day one or even trade up for an extended period of time. It’s difficult to overstate the excitement around this IPO, buoyed by the expectation that swift index inclusion will bring a further tsunami of buying. It would be naive to overlook the fact nearly every bank and large institutional investor has a vested interest in the success of this offering. "}],[{"start":584.15,"text":"The real question isn’t whether there’s enthusiasm or support, but who benefits the most from it. "}],[{"start":595.9499999999999,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1780150744_3968.mp3"}

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