The Space Economy Hit $626 Billion. SpaceX Lists June 12 at 116x Revenue. Here’s the Gap Between a Real Boom and a Good Entry Price
SpaceX Astonishing Footage

Dear Reader,
I just uncovered the craziest — and most astonishing — thing I’ve ever seen in 30 years in tech and finance. It’s a new SpaceX filing that could rock the entire market.

Sounds routine — until you realize what it actually means. It means Elon may have just solved the biggest liquidity problem in IPO history. If I’m right, this triggers a forced buying wave so large — BlackRock, Vanguard, Fidelity all move on the same day — that the gains could be historic.
We got a clue when Nasdaq quietly changed its index rules. The biggest regulatory favor ever granted to a single company. Wall Street still hasn’t connected the dots. Elon Musk predicted 1,000X returns…
A handful of early positions tied to this moment could skyrocket. I’ve never said that about any IPO in 30 years. I put the full story together in a short video.
| Watch it here before the rest of the world does → |

The backdrop to the SpaceX IPO is a genuinely large and documented boom. According to Novaspace’s 2026 Space Economy Report, the global space economy reached $626.4 billion in 2025 and is projected to pass $1.01 trillion by 2034, growing at roughly 12% a year. Analysts called 2025 a “structural inflection point” — the moment the sector shifted from rapid expansion to a more mature market, with the commercial side now about 78% of the total. This is not a speculative story; it is a balance sheet.
What this means for your retirement accounts: Into that backdrop, SpaceX filed its S-1 on May 20, targeting a Nasdaq listing under SPCX on June 12 at a $1.75 trillion valuation — the largest IPO in history. The implied multiple is roughly 116 times trailing revenue, on a consolidated business that posted a $4.9 billion net loss in 2025. The sector boom is real and verifiable. The price being asked for the headline name on day one is a separate question entirely — and the two should not be confused.
An honest counterpoint: A booming sector and a good day-one investment are not the same thing. The space economy genuinely is large and growing — but a great industry can still produce a poor entry if you buy the most-hyped name at the most-crowded moment. Seven of the ten largest IPOs in history underperformed the S&P 500 from their listing day. Being right about the boom and being right about the entry price are two different bets. Keep them separate.
The louder pitch frames the same filing in dramatic terms. Here it is, in the advertiser’s own words — the verified facts beneath it are the S-1 and the Nasdaq rule change; the return claims are the advertiser’s.
[AD] I just uncovered the craziest thing I’ve ever seen in 30 years in tech and finance — a new SpaceX filing that could rock the entire market. It means Elon may have just solved the biggest liquidity problem in IPO history. If I’m right, this triggers a forced buying wave so large — BlackRock, Vanguard, Fidelity all move on the same day — that the gains could be historic. We got a clue when Nasdaq quietly changed its index rules. Elon Musk predicted 1,000X returns. A handful of early positions tied to this moment could skyrocket. Watch it here before the rest of the world does.
The Boom Is Verifiable. The 1,000X Is Not. Know Which Number Came From Where

What this means for your portfolio: The discipline here is simple but easy to skip under hype: anchor on the verifiable figures, and treat the dramatic ones as the advertiser’s claims to investigate. The $626 billion sector, the 12% growth, the $1.75 trillion valuation, the Nasdaq rule change — all documented. The “1,000X” and “historic gains” are the pitch. You can find the trend genuinely compelling and still refuse to overpay for the headline name on day one. Those positions are not in conflict.
Most Investors Will Buy on Day One, at Peak Hype and Peak Price. A Few Will Have Arrived Earlier
Here is the pattern that repeats in every blockbuster listing. The crowd concentrates on the single most-watched name and rushes in at the open — at peak hype, peak price, and peak competition for shares. The forced index buying that arrives shortly after only adds to the premium. The investors who fare better are usually the ones who gained exposure before the roadshow opened the doors to everyone at once, or who looked at the broader, cheaper parts of the same boom rather than the one headline ticker.

Why this matters if you’re retired or near retirement: The entry point, not the company, decides the early return. If you’re drawn to the space boom — and the numbers make that understandable — the protective move is to think about how and when you get exposure, rather than reflexively buying the most-hyped name at the open. Pre-IPO routes exist, and so do broader ways to play a $626 billion sector. With the usual caution that those routes carry their own risks, here is today’s second pitch in its own words.
June 2026: The IPO Date That Changes Everything

The biggest IPO in human history just got a filing date.
Target date: June 2026.
Target raise: $50–$75 billion.
Projected valuation: $1.75 trillion.
Experts are already comparing this to Netscape’s 1995 IPO — the moment that triggered the entire dot-com boom and minted a generation of millionaires. And this is happening inside a space economy that just hit $626 billion — growing at 12% annually toward $1 trillion by 2034.
Private space investment surged 48% last year alone. The US Space Force budget just doubled to $40 billion. The boom is not a prediction anymore. It’s a balance sheet.
Most investors will buy SpaceX on Day 1 at peak hype, peak price, and peak crowd. A few will get in before that. June is closer than you think. Pre-IPO windows close first.
| Click here and I’ll show you how to get pre-IPO access before this goes mainstream → |
Two Pitches, One Discipline: Trust the Documented Boom, Question the Day-One Price

What this means for your portfolio: Both of today’s pitches lean on a real, documented boom — and both attach the same day-one urgency to it. The $626 billion sector and the $1.75 trillion filing are facts. The “1,000X,” the Netscape comparison, and the specific Space Force and investment figures are the advertisers’ framing, some of which independent sources don’t cleanly confirm. The protective move is the same in both cases: trust the documented trend, investigate any pre-IPO access offer on its own terms and risks, and refuse to overpay for the headline name on day one. Forget the hot picks — protect what you’ve already built.
Your SpaceX moment arrived
The biggest IPO in human history just got a filing date. Target: June 2026, $50–$75 billion raise, $1.75 trillion valuation — inside a space economy that just hit $626 billion and is growing 12% a year toward $1 trillion by 2034. Most investors will buy SpaceX on Day 1 at peak hype, peak price, and peak crowd. A few will get in before that.
Bottom Line
The boom behind the SpaceX IPO is real and documented. The global space economy reached $626.4 billion in 2025 and is projected to pass $1.01 trillion by 2034, growing about 12% a year, with 2025 marked as a structural inflection point and the commercial sector now roughly 78% of the total. Into that, SpaceX filed its S-1 on May 20, targeting a June 12 Nasdaq listing at a $1.75 trillion valuation — the largest IPO in history, priced at about 116 times revenue on a business that lost $4.9 billion last year. The sector is a balance sheet; the day-one price is a choice.
The first pitch frames the filing dramatically: a new SpaceX filing that could rock the market, a forced buying wave where BlackRock, Vanguard, and Fidelity all move the same day, a Nasdaq rule change described as the biggest regulatory favor ever, and Elon Musk predicting 1,000X returns. The verified parts beneath it are the S-1 and the documented Nasdaq index-rule change, which can drive real forced index buying. The “1,000X” and “historic gains” are the advertiser’s claims, not established facts — weigh them as the pitch they are.
The second pitch leans on the same backdrop with a date: the biggest IPO in human history with a June 2026 target, a $50–75 billion raise and $1.75 trillion valuation, compared to Netscape’s 1995 IPO, inside a $626 billion space economy growing 12% a year toward $1 trillion by 2034. The $626 billion, the 12% growth, and the $1.75 trillion are verifiable; the Netscape parallel and the specific “$40 billion Space Force” and “+48% private investment” figures are the advertiser’s framing, which independent sources don’t cleanly confirm. The honest point both pitches share is the real one: most investors will buy on day one at peak price, and a few will have arrived earlier.
One discipline ties it together. The space boom is documented, the IPO is real, and the entry price — not the company — decides the early return. Trust the verified trend, investigate any pre-IPO access offer on its own terms and risks, and refuse to overpay for the most-hyped name at the most-crowded moment. Forget the hot picks — protect what you’ve already built. Being right about a $626 billion boom is not the same as being right about what you pay to own a slice of it on June 12. Because the best trade you’ll ever make is the loss you never took.