As SpaceX prepares to launch the most anticipated roadshow in capital markets history, a contrarian voice cuts through the bullish commentary. Morningstar initiates coverage of Elon Musk’s aerospace and satellite company with a fair-value estimate of $780 billion – less than half the $1.75 trillion to $2 trillion range targeted for its Nasdaq debut on June 12. The analysis, published by equity analyst Nicolas Owens, arrives as a rare dissenting note in a climate where, as NewsTrackerToday observes, narrative momentum increasingly overwhelms fundamental valuation discipline in high-profile technology listings.
Owens builds his $780 billion estimate through a discounted cash flow model valuing SpaceX’s core launch business and Starlink satellite internet service at approximately $611 billion in enterprise value, adding $170 billion in probability-weighted scenarios for the company’s AI operations. The gap between that figure and SpaceX’s target valuation reflects a fundamental disagreement about how much future promise the market should pay for today. Morningstar assigns SpaceX an indeterminate economic moat status, meaning analysts cannot establish whether the competitive advantages driving current profitability are durable enough to justify the IPO premium.
The AI segment draws the sharpest skepticism. Owens states directly that Morningstar does not regard Grok – the chatbot developed by xAI, the Musk-affiliated AI company – as one of the leading AI laboratories today. SpaceX’s AI ambitions rest on orbital data centers that do not exist at commercial scale and face technological hurdles potentially outside the company’s control. Starlink also confronts competitive challenges the report treats as material uncertainties. Maya Renn, a capital markets specialist, observes that pricing emerging-technology optionality into IPO valuations produces the most severe post-listing corrections when that optionality fails to materialize on schedule.
The scale of the SpaceX offering is staggering. The company files a preliminary prospectus with the SEC on May 20, 2026, seeking to raise up to $75 billion – roughly two and a half times Saudi Aramco’s 2019 record. Goldman Sachs leads underwriting alongside Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase. The dual listing covers Nasdaq and the newly created Nasdaq Texas exchange under ticker SPCX, with Nasdaq 100 inclusion available 15 trading days post-IPO – a timeline that, as NewsTrackerToday maps, transforms the opening weeks of trading into a near-mechanical demand event driven by passive index fund inflows.
Despite the valuation warning, Morningstar stops well short of predicting an immediate collapse. The report acknowledges that SpaceX’s stock may even ascend at least for a time after listing, citing the small initial float, major investment bank support, and buoyant investor appetite for AI infrastructure. Index funds tracking the Nasdaq 100 must purchase shares within the 15-day inclusion window, creating mechanical buying pressure that coexists with fundamental skepticism – with valuation concerns typically reasserting themselves once those flows exhaust themselves.
The compensation structure governing Musk’s financial interest is among the most unusual ever disclosed in a public company prospectus. The SpaceX board approves a package in January 2026 where Musk receives a nominal base salary of $54,080, with real value in restricted shares: 60.4 million super-voting Class B shares unlock only at a $6.6 trillion valuation with 100 terawatts of orbital computing deployed; 200 million more require a $7.5 trillion market value and a Mars settlement of one million people. The structure, as NewsTrackerToday reads, either constitutes the most ambitious performance incentive in corporate history or anchors the company’s narrative at deliberately planetary scale.
The debate over SpaceX’s valuation is fundamentally about how markets price transformational ambition when the business case is legitimate but the timeline radically uncertain. Morningstar’s message to long-term investors is not to avoid the company but to wait for a more attractive entry point after the momentum-driven IPO premium dissipates – a principle that News Tracker Today frames as a recurring theme in technology IPO cycles where listing price reflects peak enthusiasm. With trading expected June 12, the coming weeks represent one of the most consequential periods in public equity market history.