Key facts
- SpaceX shares have surged over 50% in three trading sessions following its IPO.
- The company's valuation has surpassed $2.5 trillion.
- Analyst Tim Farrar suggests the valuation is driven by Elon Musk's future ambitions rather than current business performance.
- Farrar indicated that SpaceX would need a significant revenue increase to justify its current market value.
- Starlink's revenue per user has declined, posing a near-term risk.
- SpaceX announced its intention to acquire software firm Anysphere for $60 billion.
SpaceX shares continued their upward trajectory, surging 11% in premarket trading on June 16, extending a rally that has seen the stock gain over 40% in its first two sessions as a public company. The company's valuation has now surpassed $2.5 trillion, with shares set to jump over 50% in three sessions.
However, some analysts are questioning the astronomical valuation. Tim Farrar, a satcom and wireless spectrum consultant, stated that investors are backing Elon Musk's long-term vision rather than the current performance of SpaceX's launch, Starlink, and AI businesses. Farrar suggested that SpaceX would need a 50-fold increase in revenue over the next five years to justify its current market value. Musk has predicted that SpaceX could generate $1 trillion in annual revenue by 2030.
Farrar pointed to Starlink as a key near-term risk, citing a sharp decline in revenue per user and recent price hikes, which he suggests indicate slower-than-expected growth. He noted that the company's existing businesses alone do not support a valuation in the trillions. Despite his valuation concerns, Farrar acknowledged SpaceX's competitive edge, stating that the company has achieved unprecedented feats in the space industry and is likely to maintain its dominance in satellite internet for years.
In other market news, Nasdaq and Dow futures edged higher as investors awaited the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision and comments from new Chair Kevin Warsh. The Fed is widely expected to hold rates steady, but market participants are watching for any signals on future policy. The Bank of Japan, however, raised interest rates to a 31-year high earlier in the day. Tech stocks were a bright spot, with memory chip stocks also jumping. Qualcomm rose on reports of acquisition talks for AI chip startup Tenstorrent. Conversely, Dave & Buster's Entertainment tumbled after missing earnings expectations, and Robinhood announced workforce cuts.
