Elon Musk’s SpaceX formally announced plans to go public, and a news report said the company is targeting $135 a share when it lists on June 12.
SpaceX filed a prospectus with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on May 20, and the reported $135 target and the June 12 timetable come from outside reporting rather than the company’s announcement. The listing would trade under the ticker SPCX and, if the reported valuation range of $1.75 trillion to $2 trillion holds, would place SpaceX among the world’s most valuable public companies.
The raw figures are stark: $135 a share, a June 12 listing date, and a private-market valuation band of $1.75 trillion to $2 trillion. Those numbers sit at the center of investor attention because the offering would give everyday investors direct exposure to the commercial space economy — from Starlink satellite internet to reusable rockets and, potentially, Musk’s broader AI ambitions.
SpaceX’s filing on May 20 makes the IPO official in regulatory terms. The timing reported by the news service tightens the calendar: with less than a month between the filing and the announced listing date, market participants will be watching roadshows, underwriting paperwork and SEC clearance closely for signs the schedule will stick.
The SpaceX Stock Price Chart that traders and advisers start to draw now will be shaped by more than headline numbers. Supply and demand for SPCX shares, allocations to early investors, and how the company frames revenue from Starlink and launch services in its prospectus will determine whether a $135 price is achievable at the open or simply a reference point in secondary reporting.
That leads to the central friction: the most consequential price and valuation figures were reported by a news service and not spelled out in SpaceX’s public filing. The company’s prospectus confirms the IPO process is under way, but it does not, in the available text, read like a full pricing announcement tied to a firm date and share target. The gap is material because it separates SpaceX’s formal regulatory step from the market narrative investors are already trading on.
The practical consequence for retail investors is immediate. If SpaceX lists at the reported price and valuation, SPCX would offer direct exposure to a set of businesses that until now have been accessible mainly through private markets: Starlink’s consumer and enterprise broadband, commercial and government rocket launches, and ancillary ventures that could feed Musk’s AI efforts. If those numbers prove optimistic, the initial pop could be muted or absent.
Analysts and markets will now watch a short checklist: confirmations of bank syndicate pricing, a formal final prospectus amendment if price guidance changes, and any regulatory holds. Equally important will be how SpaceX allocates shares between institutional and retail tranches; that will shape how many everyday investors actually gain access on day one.
The clearest next milestone remains the planned June 12 listing under SPCX. What is unresolved — and what will determine whether the SpaceX Stock Price Chart becomes a record-setting opening or a more modest debut — is whether the $135 target and the $1.75 trillion to $2 trillion valuation range will hold as the company moves from prospectus to priced offering.




