SpaceX's IPO has broken all kinds of records.
The company carries a multitrillion-dollar valuation and might be in a bubble.
Space Exploration Technologies (NASDAQ: SPCX), or SpaceX, couldn't have had a better initial public offering (IPO). After raising an unparalleled $75 billion, which rose to $85.7 billion after underwriters sold more shares via overallotment options, SpaceX closed its first trading day with a market cap north of $2 trillion, the only company to ever debut at that valuation.
As of June 18 (pre-market), SpaceX has reached $2.5 trillion, briefly surpassing Amazon as the fifth-most-valuable company in the world. Shares have been flirting with $200, though now that the initial excitement is starting to wear off, investors will see how this stock trades sans the excessive exuberance.
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Will the next year favor this megacap space stock -- and better yet, will investors regret not buying SpaceX at today's price if it does?
Image source: The Motley Fool.
No stock has generated as much excitement at its IPO as SpaceX, yet a comparison with Meta Platforms at its debut could be illuminating.
The company known at that time as Facebook was valued at over $104 billion before its opening day -- one of the largest IPOs in history -- but shares fell over 30% within its first year of trading. It took a set of aggressive acquisitions and a complete overhaul of its advertising platform before investors were convinced this stock had legs. Since its IPO, Meta stock has delivered a gain of almost 1,400%, and its market cap is a little less than SpaceX's at $1.44 trillion.
In 2026, SpaceX is arguably a much more mature business than Facebook was in 2012. Last year, revenue clocked in at $18.7 billion, up 33% from 2024, and that figure could very well double in 2026, if not generate more. Elon Musk would be "surprised" if SpaceX weren't bringing in at least $1 trillion in 2031, while Morgan Stanley sees revenue reaching $3.4 trillion in 2040.
Even with these strong revenue projections -- and they are, to be sure, just estimates -- SpaceX's valuation is hard to swallow. Today, the stock trades at about 134 times sales, which is redolent of the dangerously high valuations of the late-'90s dot-com era.
Even if revenue grows to $36 billion for 2026 -- a figure that Morningstar analyst Nicolas Owens estimates -- the stock would still trade at nearly 70 times forward sales. Like rockets, that's a multiple that needs flawless execution to reach new heights.
A year from now, SpaceX could be carrying a higher market cap. But here's the part that bothers me: It could also be carrying half its current valuation without any fundamental change to its underlying business. Its business could, in fact, get stronger, and the multitrillion-dollar valuation would still look pricy by traditional standards.
A triple-digit P/S is a warning sign flashing the words "volatility ahead." You don't have to wait a year to buy SpaceX, but waiting until these early days of extreme enthusiasm wear off might be the most prudent thing for long-term investors.
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Steven Porrello has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon and Meta Platforms. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.