SpaceX Prepares for Debut After $75 Billion IPO Breaks Record

SpaceX made history with a $75 billion IPO that instantly turned it into one of the biggest public companies in the world. Now it has to win over the market.

Friday’s trading will be a critical test for the $1.8 trillion rocket, satellite and artificial intelligence company and Elon Musk, its founder. Even after raising the largest-ever amount in an IPO, SpaceX still needs the market’s validation of its ambition to dominate AI and carry humans to the moon and Mars, as well as the company’s controversial governance regime that promises Musk near-total control.

“Scaling is very expensive,” SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell told CNBC. “The things that we’re doing cost a lot to do.” Even as a public company, SpaceX will focus on long-term horizons and less on quarterly performance, Shotwell said.

Indications of where SpaceX shares could open are expected to start flowing at some point after the market opens at 9:30 a.m. in New York. Shadow markets are pricing a blockbuster debut, indicating a pop of at least 35% from the $135 offering price.

At the Nasdaq MarketSite building in New York’s Time Square, Shotwell and SpaceX Chief Financial Officer Bret Johnsen arrived a couple of hours before the exchange’s official open, making their way through a crowd of paparazzi, private security guards and police. Conspicuously absent was Musk himself, though his mother Maye was among the first to arrive.

The IPO was more than four times oversubscribed on Thursday, Bloomberg News reported. The company’s unusual move to set a fixed price and size left bankers unable to capture surging interest, leaving a vast group of would-be buyers jockeying for whatever they can get and potentially setting up a roaring first day for the stock.