SpaceX Needs to Get to $5 Quadrillion to Rival Mag Seven Magic

It’s not often that investors encounter something truly new in markets. But they will soon when Space Exploration Technologies Corp., OpenAI and Anthropic PBC go public with trillion-dollar valuations, or close to it. No company listed in the US has ever come to market so extravagantly priced — by a long shot.

All three are undeniably groundbreaking businesses with mindboggling potential in transformative fields. Companies with that profile typically demand a big down payment from investors for future growth. But these initial public offerings put that proposition on steroids — never have investors been asked to wager so much on an uncertain future. From these valuations, it’s hard to imagine the three debutantes delivering a post-IPO payoff anywhere near what publicly traded technology giants have produced in recent decades.

The math is laughable, in fact. Median market capitalization at IPO for the Magnificent Seven was $1.2 billion. Their median market cap is now $3.1 trillion, more than a 2,500-fold increase. For SpaceX to achieve comparable growth from a $1.8 trillion starting valuation, it would have to approach a value of $5 quadrillion.

Companies are not supposed to show up on exchanges already the world’s most valuable businesses. New ventures raise money privately when they’re small and speculative, but established businesses have almost always turned to public markets when they needed sizable capital for growth. Everyone wins: Venture investors offload their shares to cash in on their early support, and new investors participate in potentially even bigger gains ahead. That’s the story of practically every public company trading today, including tech behemoths Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc. and Nvidia Corp.

That model has been upended by private markets awash with capital and capable of feeding practically unlimited cash to the most sought-after businesses. The result is companies staying private longer and coming to market with ever higher valuations. Nvidia was valued at roughly $600 million when it went public in 1999. Five years later, Alphabet Inc. raised the stakes with a $23 billion valuation at IPO. Meta Platforms Inc. raised the bar again to $104 billion in 2012, which seemed like a fortune at the time. That’s loose change compared with this year’s blockbuster IPOs.