Publications

Perspectives: A rocket, a record IPO and what it means down here
Research - JUNE 16, 2026

To read this full article you need to be subscribed to Newsline.

Sign in Sign up for a FREE subscription

Perspectives: A rocket, a record IPO and what it means down here

by Geoffrey Dohrmann

When Space Exploration Technologies priced its initial public offering last week — about $135 a share, roughly $75 billion raised, a valuation near $1.77 trillion, the largest stock-market debut in history — my first reaction was probably the one many of you had. A rocket company. What does that have to do with the buildings, the platforms and the long-lived assets the rest of us spend our careers underwriting?

The honest answer, measured by what SpaceX actually owns, is: not a great deal. It will not be turning up in anyone’s core real estate fund, and an infrastructure manager who tried to slot a hypergrowth satellite business into a portfolio built for stable, contracted cash flow would have some explaining to do at the next investor meeting.

Measured by what the offering

Forgot your username or password?