THU 02 JUL 2026 · GMT EDITION A WHITESTONE INTELLIGENCE PUBLICATION
MARKETS · CYBER · MEMOS · MODELS
DAILY ISSUES26 MAY27 MAY28 MAY29 MAY30 MAY31 MAY01 JUN02 JUN03 JUN04 JUN05 JUN06 JUN07 JUN08 JUN09 JUN10 JUN11 JUN12 JUN13 JUN14 JUN15 JUN16 JUN17 JUN18 JUN19 JUN21 JUN22 JUN23 JUN24 JUN25 JUN26 JUN27 JUN28 JUN29 JUN30 JUN01 JUN02 JUNALL ›
FRONT PAGE / MEMOS / MEM-30D-005
MEMOS · leaked memos · 2026-05-20SCOOP 83

SpaceX files Form S-1 for ~$1.75T Nasdaq IPO under ticker SPCX, disclosing first detailed financials

Space Exploration Technologies Corp.

·FILED 2026-05-20·1 MIN READ·RE-VERIFIED 2026-07-02 UTC·✓ RE-VERIFIED 2026-07-02

VERDICT — CONFIRMED

QA-reviewed confidence · primary + corroborating sources verified · re-verified 2026-07-02 UTC
SpaceX files Form S-1 for ~$1.75T Nasdaq IPO under ticker SPCX, disclosing first detailed
Generated illustration · not a photograph

Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) filed a Form S-1 registration statement with the SEC on May 20, 2026, launching one of the largest IPOs ever attempted. The prospectus indicates a planned Nasdaq listing under the ticker SPCX, with reported valuation targets ranging from about $1.75 trillion to as high as $2 trillion and a capital raise reported around $75 billion. An Amendment No. 1 to the Form S-1 (registration No. 333-296070) followed on or about June 1, 2026.

The filing provided SpaceX's first detailed public financials: for the three months ended March 31, 2026, the company reported consolidated revenue of $4.694 billion, a loss from operations of $1.943 billion, and adjusted EBITDA of $1.127 billion. Segment disclosures cited by trade analysts showed Starlink connectivity as the company's revenue and profit engine, with the launch and AI-related units less profitable or loss-making. Reported lead underwriters include Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, Bank of America and Citi. Coverage indicated a roadshow beginning in early June and pricing/debut targeted for mid-June, with some reports pointing to a June 11-12 pricing-and-debut window on Nasdaq.

Specific share count and final price terms were expected to be set after the roadshow. SpaceX's choice of Nasdaq was framed as aligning with the high-growth technology cohort it competes with for investor capital. Exact figures beyond the Q1 financials remained subject to amendment and market conditions.

Share
Filed by the Memos desk · verified by the verification desk · re-verified 2026-07-02 · Our standards: the two-source rule ›
CITE THIS FILE — The Dossier Wire · mem-30d-005 · filed 2026-05-20 · https://thedwire.com/wire/mem-30d-005-spacex-files-form-s-1-for-1-75t-nasdaq-ipo-under-ticker.html · Primary and corroborating sources listed above; archived at publication. Republishing & licensing: hello@thedwire.com.
More from Memos FULL DESK ›
Meta cuts ~8,000 jobs in AI restructuring, leaked Zuckerberg and Gale memos warn
The Next Web
MEMOS · SCOOP 80

Meta cuts ~8,000 jobs in AI restructuring, leaked Zuckerberg and Gale memos warn 'success isn't a given'

Meta began cutting roughly 8,000 jobs — about 10% of its global workforce — on May 20, 2026, executing reductions first flagged in an internal memo from Chief People Officer Janelle Gale that Bloomberg published on April 23, 2026. Terminations were rolled out in waves, with reports of 4 a.m. local-time emails. Gale framed the cuts as part

✓ verified
READ THE FILE ›
SEC rescinds 50-year 'no-deny' settlement gag rule, freeing defendants
Photo: United States Securities and Exchange Commission · via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain
MEMOS · SCOOP 72

SEC rescinds 50-year 'no-deny' settlement gag rule, freeing defendants to publicly dispute its allegations

The SEC announced on May 18, 2026 that it had rescinded Rule 202.5(e), the 'no-deny' provision of its long-standing 'no-admit, no-deny' settlement framework that, since its adoption in 1972, had required settling defendants to promise not to publicly deny the agency's allegations. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins framed the move in free-speech te

✓ verified
READ THE FILE ›
Fed Governor Stephen Miran resigns to clear a seat as Senate confirms Kevin Wars
Getty Images via Fortune
MEMOS · SCOOP 70

Fed Governor Stephen Miran resigns to clear a seat as Senate confirms Kevin Warsh to succeed Powell as chair

Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran submitted his resignation on Thursday, May 14, 2026, with the departure to take effect when, or shortly before, incoming Chair Kevin Warsh is sworn in. The move clears a seat on the seven-member Board of Governors for Warsh, whom the Senate confirmed (by a narrow vote, per reporting) as the next Fed

✓ verified
READ THE FILE ›

The morning wire in your inbox — every brief, primary sources linked, no noise.

Free tier. The Wire — continuous desk briefs · Records archive · Bureau alerts.

Stored to the wire's subscriber list. No spam, unsubscribe any time.