SpaceX is asking the market to buy a vision: a $1.8 trillion IPO that bundles reusable rockets, a fast-growing Starlink internet arm, and an ambitious AI push. Yet valuation specialist Aswath Damodaran peels back the sales pitch, runs the numbers from the S-1, and lands on a much more conservative figure near $1.3 trillion. That gap matters because it exposes the specific assumptions investors are being asked to accept about market size, margins, and relentless execution.
SpaceX runs three main businesses that matter to any valuation: launch services, satellite broadband, and AI products and services. Each one behaves differently financially, with launch showing improving unit economics from reusability, Starlink scaling subscribers but still wrestling with thin margins, and AI sucking capital for computing while promising outsized revenue growth. Those contrasts mean you cannot treat SpaceX like a normal software or hardware company when you price its future cash flows.
Damodaran, known to many as “The “Dean of Valuation”,” builds models by testing the toughest assumptions and making accounting adjustments that reveal different cash generation patterns. He raises his long-term revenue forecast for SpaceX’s AI arm to $160 billion, which is a big concession to the bull case, but he simultaneously pulls the expected AI operating margin down to 25 percent because competition and heavy capex will pressure profitability. That combination of big top-line potential and constrained margins is central to why his valuation diverges from management’s headline number.
The S-1 shows revenue growth estimates and recent performance that back both cautious and optimistic takes: consolidated revenue up about a third in 2025 driven by Starlink, launch revenue advancing at a single-digit pace, and AI beginning to contribute meaningfully to the top line. But rapid revenue growth does not automatically translate into free cash flow if the company keeps plowing billions into data centers, chips, and R&D. Damodaran treats certain R&D outlays as capital investments, which raises reported earnings after you adjust accounting treatment, but it also highlights how dependent future profitability will be on scaling those investments successfully.
On margins, Damodaran makes explicit choices: he boosts the long-term launch margin to 45 percent on the back of Starship reusability, he keeps Starlink at a 60 percent margin as subscriber leverage and utilization improve, and he assigns a 25 percent margin to AI to reflect ongoing competition and rising costs. Those margin assumptions are optimistic for some segments and conservative for others, but together they form the backbone of a valuation that emphasizes realism over hype. The math from those inputs yields an enterprise value near $1.2 trillion and an equity value about $1.3 trillion once planned IPO proceeds are included.
That $1.3 trillion figure sits about 28 percent below the $1.8 trillion IPO target, and the shortfall comes down to a few clustered bets: how big the AI opportunity actually is, how much margin SpaceX can sustainably extract in the face of well-funded rivals, and how much capital the company will need to reinvest to keep scaling. In Damodaran’s model, any slippage on those fronts materially reduces the fair price, which makes the IPO level look aggressive unless the company delivers near-perfect execution across multiple fronts.
Investors should also factor in the structural volatility tied to IPOs and speculative narratives, where initial enthusiasm is often followed by a reality check once lock-ups expire or macro conditions change. History offers examples where first-day pops were replaced by sharp corrections later on, and the market for highly hyped tech names has not been immune to such swings. That pattern amplifies the risk of buying at a price that bakes in ideal outcomes rather than a reasonable range of scenarios.
SpaceX’s strengths are real: pioneering reusable rockets, a massive satellite network, and the strategic integration of a consumer-facing AI layer that could unlock new revenue streams. But strengths alone do not erase execution risk, competition, or the capital intensity of AI infrastructure, and those are the exact factors Damodaran stresses when he trims the valuation. The result is a sober reminder that price is where you enter the story and value is what you should reasonably expect to receive over time.
For anyone tempted by the IPO spotlight, patience and a clear framework matter more than FOMO. Watching how revenue converts to free cash, whether margins firm under competitive pressure, and how much additional capital is required will tell you whether the IPO price was a justified leap or a stretch. Betting on perfection across launch, Starlink, and AI is a high bar; Damodaran’s model simply asks investors to price in a few plausible slips and see how the numbers change.
