SpaceX (SPCX) Stock: Musk Says Company Could Be Worth More Than Earth

10-Jul-2026 CoinCentral

TLDR

  • Elon Musk posted on X that SpaceX will be “worth more than the rest of Earth” if it achieves its goals
  • SpaceX IPO’d on June 12 at $135, raising $86 billion — the largest IPO in history — hitting an all-time high of $225.64
  • Stock pulled back 26% from its high before recovering to around $152; SPCX was down 1.5% in premarket Friday at $149.96
  • Analyst price targets range widely from $75 (bear case) to $900 (Citi bull case), with an average around $240
  • Wall Street projects SpaceX will need ~$150 billion in extra financing between 2026 and 2031 to build its orbital AI business

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk made his boldest valuation claim yet on Thursday, posting on X that SpaceX will be “worth more than the rest of Earth” if the company accomplishes its goals.

The comment came in response to criticism of a reported deal between Anthropic, xAI, and SpaceX tied to AI compute access. One X user argued the arrangement could become “the biggest unforced error of the AI era” for Anthropic. Musk’s reply shifted the conversation toward SpaceX’s long-term ambitions.

SpaceX stock (SPCX) was trading at $149.96 in premarket Friday, down 1.5%. The S&P 500 and Dow futures were flat and up 0.2%, respectively.


SPCX Stock Card
Space Exploration Technologies Corp., SPCX

It’s not the first time Musk has made sky-high projections. In 2022, he said Tesla could be worth more than Apple and Saudi Aramco combined — a pair worth roughly $4.4 trillion at the time. Tesla sits at around $1.8 trillion today.

Musk has often referenced the Kardashev Scale, a framework for measuring civilizations by energy use. His stated ambition is for humanity to harness the power of the sun — far beyond anything Earth-bound companies can claim.

SpaceX went public on June 12 at $135 per share, raising $86 billion in the largest IPO in history. The stock debuted at $150 and surged 50% to an all-time high of $225.64 on June 16, briefly pushing the company’s valuation near $3 trillion.

The rally didn’t last. Concerns over a bond offering, heavy Terafab data center spending, and upcoming insider lockup expirations hit the stock hard. SPCX fell 26% from its peak, touching $145.20, before stabilizing around $152.

On July 7, SpaceX entered the Nasdaq-100, triggering roughly $4.3 billion in passive inflows as index funds picked up the stock.

What Wall Street Thinks

More than a dozen analysts issued initial research following the IPO. The range of targets tells the story. Raymond James has the highest target at $800. Citi’s bull case reaches $900, implying a valuation of roughly $12 trillion. Morgan Stanley sits at $300, with a bull case of $600 and a bear case of $75 — which assumes Starship isn’t operational until 2029.

The average analyst price target is around $240, per FactSet.

Wall Street projects SpaceX revenues of more than $630 billion by 2031, up from roughly $39 billion expected in 2026. Operating income is seen topping $340 billion by 2031, from about $1 billion this year.

The Capital Requirement

That growth won’t come cheap. Analysts estimate SpaceX will need approximately $150 billion in additional financing between 2026 and 2031 to fund its orbital AI buildout.

On the revenue side, Anthropic is currently paying SpaceX $1.25 billion per month for access to the Colossus 1 AI supercluster — more than 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs and 300 MW of power — in a deal that could total $30 to $40 billion.

SpaceX also completed its 80th Falcon 9 mission of the year this week, continuing its satellite deployment cadence.

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