SpaceX wants regular people to buy its stock. And it made a 17-minute video to convince them.
The company released the video on June 4, directed entirely by CFO Bret Johnsen, as a marketing tool for its upcoming IPO. It covers the full spread of SpaceX’s business: rocket launches, the Starlink satellite constellation, and a growing AI division that includes concepts like orbital data centers. The pitch is aimed squarely at retail investors, with SpaceX planning to allocate up to 30% of its projected $75 billion IPO to individual investors worldwide.
That’s not a typo. The proposed valuation sits between $1.75 trillion and $1.77 trillion, which would make it the largest IPO in history.
The Tesla playbook, but with rockets
Johnsen is the sole speaker in the video, walking viewers through each business line. The message threads together three narratives: SpaceX as a proven launch provider, Starlink as a global broadband disruptor, and AI as the connective tissue binding future ambitions together.
The multiplanetary angle gets its moment too. Mars colonization, expanded satellite infrastructure, and long-term vision statements are included. For a company founded by Musk in 2002 with an initial focus on rocketry, the scope of ambition has expanded considerably.
Why retail gets 30%
Reserving up to 30% of a $75 billion offering for individual investors is a meaningful departure from standard practice. Most high-profile IPOs allocate somewhere in the low single digits to retail, if they bother at all.
Tesla proved a retail-heavy model works. Its retail investor base became one of the most engaged in public markets. SpaceX appears to be betting it can replicate that dynamic, drawing explicit parallels with Tesla’s shareholder engagement strategies.
What this means for investors
SpaceX at a $1.75 trillion-plus valuation would place it among the most valuable companies on Earth before it even starts trading publicly.
The bull case centers on SpaceX as the dominant commercial launch provider, Starlink’s potential to reshape global broadband access in underserved regions, and AI positioning including orbital data centers.
Worth noting: the video and subsequent coverage made zero mention of crypto assets or digital tokens. This is a straight equity play, pitched through traditional investment channels.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

1 hour ago
2
















English (US) ·