SpaceX goes public, and its founder is already thinking much bigger
By Shekari Philemon | RollingOut
Musk, founder of SpaceX and the world’s wealthiest individual, made a sweeping prediction over the weekend, suggesting his rocket company could surpass $1 trillion in annual revenue within the next several years. The forecast arrived just days after SpaceX made its public market debut, an event that valued the company at more than $2 trillion and instantly ranked it among the six largest American firms by market capitalization.
The timing of the prediction was notable. SpaceX had barely begun trading as a public company before its founder was already projecting a financial future that would place it in territory few companies in history have ever reached.
A gap between ambition and current numbers
The distance between where SpaceX stands today and where Musk envisions it going is considerable. The company generated $18.67 billion in revenue in 2025, a meaningful increase from the $14.02 billion it recorded the year before. But that growth came alongside a significant financial setback. After posting a profit of $791 million in 2024, SpaceX swung to a net loss of $4.94 billion in 2025, a reversal that raised questions about the cost of its rapid expansion.
For context, the companies that currently trade at valuations comparable to SpaceX generate vastly more revenue. Technology giants with similar market capitalizations generate multiples of what SpaceX currently earns, making the $1 trillion target a projection that requires an almost unprecedented pace of growth over a compressed timeline.
What Wall Street actually thinks
Professional forecasters on Wall Street are considerably more measured in their expectations. Leading financial institutions that have modeled SpaceX’s trajectory project 2030 revenue figures that, while impressive, fall well short of Musk’s stated ambition. Estimates from major investment banks place the company’s potential 2030 revenue somewhere between $330 billion and $470 billion, figures that reflect genuine optimism about the company’s prospects without fully embracing the most aggressive scenario.
That gap between founder optimism and analyst caution is not unusual for companies at the frontier of emerging industries. What makes SpaceX’s situation distinctive is the scale of the ambition and the speed at which the company has already reshaped expectations about what a private aerospace firm can become.
The business behind the bold number
SpaceX operates across several distinct and growing business lines. Its Starlink satellite internet service has expanded rapidly and now serves customers across dozens of countries, providing a recurring revenue stream that did not exist at meaningful scale just a few years ago. Its launch business continues to dominate the commercial rocket market, with a cadence and cost structure that competitors have struggled to match.
The company is also developing next-generation hardware that could open entirely new revenue streams, including ambitious plans for deep-space transportation that extend well beyond anything currently in commercial operation. Whether those projects translate into the kind of revenue Musk is describing by the end of the decade will depend on execution, regulation and market demand that remain difficult to predict with confidence.
A new chapter for the company
SpaceX’s entry into the public markets marks a significant transition for a company that spent years as one of the most closely watched and highly valued private firms in the world. The IPO cemented Musk’s status as the first person in history to be considered a trillionaire, a milestone that arrived alongside a company still working through the financial pressures of aggressive investment.
Whether $1 trillion in revenue by 2030 is a realistic goal or a motivating aspiration, the number reflects the scale at which Musk thinks about SpaceX’s role in the global economy.
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