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SpaceX (SPCX.US) Acquires AI Coding Leader Cursor, Cementing a $28.5 Trillion Joint Vision for Super AI
Last month, SpaceX released its highly anticipated IPO prospectus, which stated that the company’s self-assessed total addressable market (TAM) for SpaceX amounts to a staggering $28.5 trillion—an ambition so vast that, if ever realized, this 'space-AI empire' blueprint would approach the entirety of U.S. economic output.
SpaceX has sparked a frenzy of investment in commercial spaceflight! UK-based aerospace supplier Doncasters (DPC.US), a long-established player in the aviation industry, is capitalizing on the momentum to launch a U.S. IPO, aiming to raise approximately $
Aerospace supplier Doncasters (DPC.US) is seeking to raise $746.7 million through an IPO on the U.S. stock market, joining a wave of commercial aerospace and defense companies entering the public markets. The company plans to offer 23.3 million shares at a price range of $28 to $32 per share, which would value Doncasters Group at $4.43 billion at the high end of the range.
Barclays: Space-based data centers cost three times as much as terrestrial ones and are unlikely to challenge established players within the next decade.
Barclays estimates that orbital data centers cost approximately $50 million per megawatt, with a total five-year lifecycle cost reaching as high as $51 billion per gigawatt. Five key barriers—launch costs, radiation-hardened hardware requirements, thermal dissipation constraints, bandwidth limitations, and regulatory uncertainty—mean they will not pose a threat to traditional data centers within the next decade. Although SpaceX’s IPO has sparked investor enthusiasm and terrestrial expansion challenges have provided fertile ground for the space narrative, orbital data centers are more likely to serve as a complement rather than a replacement.
Top 20 by Trading Volume | SpaceX IPO Surges 19% on Debut, Propelling Musk to Trillionaire Status; SanDisk Briefly Tops $2,000, Hitting Record High; Agent-Based AI Fuels CPU Demand, Intel Rises Over 6%, ARM Gains Over 11%
Special Report: Elon Musk’s SpaceX Debuts on Nasdaq, Becoming the Largest IPO in History and Ranking First in U.S. Stock Trading Volume on Friday SpaceX surged 19.22%, with trading volume reaching $83.392 billion. On its Nasdaq debut, SpaceX’s stock closed at $160.95, up $25.95 or 19.22%, giving the company a market capitalization of $2.10456 trillion, marking the largest initial public offering in history.
A $2 trillion aerospace giant arrives! SpaceX surges 19% in its debut as investors pour over $350 billion into what is set to be the largest IPO in history.
SpaceX's indicative opening price was nearly 30% higher than its IPO price, and the stock surged by more than 30% shortly after listing. By market close, SpaceX ranked sixth by market capitalization on U.S. exchanges, with Tesla in eighth place. Other space-related stocks plummeted, with Virgin Galactic falling over 30%. According to reports, institutional investor demand for SpaceX's IPO exceeded $250 billion, yet nearly one-third of institutions received no allocation; retail orders surpassed $100 billion but were allocated only 20%. At the bell-ringing ceremony, Elon Musk stated that the company’s public listing marked a significant step toward humanity’s interstellar civilization. SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said the IPO would accelerate the expansion of Starship and Starlink.
SpaceX IPO triggers 'siphon effect,' sending U.S. space-related stocks sharply lower
① On its first day of trading, SpaceX shares surged by more than 30% at one point, pushing the company’s total market capitalization above $2.2 trillion and lifting Elon Musk’s net worth beyond $1 trillion. ② Shares of other space-related companies faced a sell-off, with Rocket Lab dropping over 8%, Redwire falling nearly 10%, and AST SpaceMobile declining more than 14%.