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Elon Musk Has a Strange Requirement for Banks Working on SpaceX’s IPO

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Why This Matters

Elon Musk's unconventional requirement for banks working on SpaceX's IPO—mandating their purchase of Grok subscriptions—highlights his unique approach to business and innovation. This move not only underscores the importance of AI in high-stakes financial ventures but also signals a broader shift toward integrating AI tools into major corporate strategies, impacting both the tech industry and investors. Consumers and industry players should watch how such integrations influence future IPOs and corporate governance.

Key Takeaways

In normal circumstances, banks pitch for IPO business with expertise and competitive fees. But SpaceX isn’t a normal circumstance, and Elon Musk doesn’t do things in a normal way. The future trillionaire is demanding that banks, law firms, and auditors working on the IPO purchase Grok subscriptions, and some banks have already agreed to spend tens of millions.

The stakes are massive. SpaceX’s IPO is expected to raise over $50 billion at a valuation above $1 trillion, generating more than $500 million in fees for the five banks advising: Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley.

The move is a big win for Grok, which ranks fourth in the AI race behind ChatGPT, Claude, and Google’s Gemini. The chatbot has also been mired in controversy after sharing antisemitic content and generating nonconsensual sexualized images, leading countries like Indonesia and Malaysia to ban it.