SpaceX may soon become the largest IPO in history. 

That is the headline Wall Street wants everyone watching. 

The company plans to sell 555 million shares at $135 each. That would raise about $75 billion. If banks sell extra shares, the total could reach about $86 billion. 

The deal would value SpaceX at nearly $1.78 trillion.

That is a stunning number. But the bigger story is not SpaceX. The bigger story is America. 

Only in the United States can a private company dream this big, raise this much money, and ask public investors to fund the next stage.

SpaceX shows American ambition at full scale.

SpaceX started with rockets. 

Then it built Starlink into a satellite internet business. 

Now it is pitching investors on artificial intelligence infrastructure, advanced launch vehicles, satellites, orbital data centers, and the long road to Mars. 

That is American prosperity in action. It is messy, risky, expensive, and bold. But it is also the reason America leads.

Our system rewards builders. Our markets fund ambition. Our entrepreneurs see limits and push through them. That is why capital still flows here first. 

Not Europe, China, or anywhere else, but here. America remains the world’s greatest engine for turning imagination into industry.

That does not mean every price makes sense. That does not mean every IPO deserves your money. 

It means the American machine still works. That is the angle most investors miss. They look at SpaceX and see hype. We look at SpaceX and see the strength of our system.

SpaceX built reusable rockets. It connects remote areas through Starlink. It competes with major defense companies. 

Now it wants to raise historic money from public investors. That is not a weakness. That is proof of America’s strength.

But our American Prosperity approach demands something more. We do not buy stories; instead, we buy businesses.

A Great Company Can Still Be a Bad Stock

A great business can still be a poor investment at the wrong price. 

SpaceX is reportedly coming public at around 92X its annual revenue, and the company is still losing money. 

That is not a small detail. That is the whole point. Price, corporate governance, cash flow, and shareholder rights all matter.

Elon Musk is expected to control about 82% of the voting power after the IPO. Public investors will provide capital, but they will have little control. 

That may work out fine. Musk has built extraordinary companies. But investors must understand the deal. 

They are not buying control. They are buying exposure. That is very different.

At American Prosperity, we admire innovation. We celebrate American builders. We love companies that attack huge markets with bold leadership. 

But we do not suspend judgment because a story is exciting. 

That is how investors get hurt. The market is full of great companies that became bad stocks. Why? Because investors paid too much.

The dot-com bubble had real companies inside it. The fiber boom built real infrastructure. The electric vehicle boom created real winners. But many investors still lost money. They confused a powerful trend with a good entry price. 

That is not our approach.

Our job is not to chase the loudest deal. Our job is to find quality businesses before Mr. Market fully understands them. 

We only invest when we find a company with strong financials, exceptional leadership, and a business powered by a strong tailwind. 

We only buy when the stock price gives us room to be wrong. That last part matters most when excitement is highest.

SpaceX shows that America is still building the future. But the IPO also shows why discipline creates returns. 

When everyone wants in, investors often stop asking hard questions. That is when price stops being an anchor. A $1.78 trillion valuation asks investors to believe many things will go right.

AI must scale. Starlink must keep growing. Launch demand must remain strong. Capital spending must produce high returns. 

Management must execute across several massive markets. That may happen. But hope is not a margin of safety.

We Don’t Need to Chase Every Rocket

The good news is simple. 

Investors do not need to own every exciting company. They need to own the right ones, at the right prices. That is how wealth compounds. 

SpaceX may become one of the most important companies in American history. It may reshape space, communications, defense, and AI infrastructure. I hope it does.

America benefits when bold companies win. But our readers do not need to chase a historic IPO to profit from American wealth creation. 

There are already public companies with proven earnings, strong cash flow, and durable tailwinds. They are building the same future from different angles.

Power. Semiconductors. Data centers. Automation. Defense. Infrastructure. That is where our American Prosperity approach stays focused. 

SpaceX is a reminder that America still dreams bigger than anyone. It is also a reminder that investors must remain disciplined.

Celebrate the company. Respect the achievement. Watch the IPO. 

But never forget the rule. 

The greatest story in the world still needs the right price.

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If you have questions, you can send them to me at [email protected].

And follow me on X here for updates.

Regards,

Charles Mizrahi
Prosperity Insider

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