#SpaceX #IPO #MuskSpaceX$1TrillionRevenue2030 Days after its record-breaking IPO, which valued the company above $2 trillion, Elon Musk claimed SpaceX revenue could reach roughly $1 trillion a year by 2030, and likely more in 2031. The market fundamentals tell a different story for now: SpaceX reported $18.7bn in revenue for 2025, against a loss of $4.9bn, meaning hitting $1 trillion by 2030 would demand a 53-fold jump in five years — a pace no company near this size has ever achieved. Wall Street is far more conservative: Goldman Sachs put 2030 revenue at about $474bn, while Morgan Stanley landed near $330bn, reaching $3.4tn only by 2040. The future strategy hinges largely on diversification beyond launch — the bulk of projected growth is expected to come from Starlink and satellite-borne AI ambitions rather than traditional launch services. For markets, this is a high-stakes bet: if Musk's trajectory gains credibility, it could reshape valuations across space, satellite, and AI infrastructure — but a shortfall risks a sharp valuation correction.