The SpaceX initial public offering is about to test whether Wall Street needs a new playbook.
The company, which starts trading on Friday, has a business that doesn't cleanly fit into the categories investors usually use. Elon Musk's space firm isn't just a rocket company, or satellite internet company, or traditional defense contractor.
The better way to understand SpaceX may be as private geopolitical infrastructure: A company with products that are embedded in how governments, militaries, airlines, remote communities and AI workloads operate.
That is the core of the "strategic tech" premium. The combination of hyper growth, national importance and light regulation is rarely seen in the same company at the same time.
In its IPO filing, SpaceX said it was the primary launch provider for the U.S. government in 2025, launching 11 of 12 National Security Space Launch medium and heavy-lift missions and all five U.S. crew and cargo missions to the International Space Station for NASA. Roughly one-fifth of its 2025 revenue came from U.S. federal government agencies.
A traditional valuation can miss that kind of essential role in government operations.
A normal tech company is valuable because customers choose it. A strategic tech company becomes more valuable because customers may have trouble replacing it.
SpaceX already operates 10,000 Starlink broadband and mobile satellites in low-Earth orbit, which it says accounted for about 75% of all active maneuverable satellites in orbit as of March 31. Starlink had 10.3 million subscribers at that point, more than double the 5 million it had a year earlier.
The bull case is not just that SpaceX can sell more satellite internet subscriptions. It's that more of the world's communications, defense, disaster response, aviation, maritime and space infrastructure could start to depend on the network.
But SpaceX is different from the defense giants it is often compared with.
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