
Elon Musk just told the world his rocket company will earn $1 trillion a year by 2030 — starting from less than $19 billion today.
Quick Take
- Musk posted on X that SpaceX could hit $1 trillion in revenue by 2030, just days after its blockbuster stock market debut valued the company above $2 trillion.
- SpaceX earned $18.7 billion in 2025 — meaning Musk’s target requires roughly 53 times more revenue in just four years.
- Wall Street’s most bullish analysts top out around $486 billion by 2030, less than half of Musk’s figure.
- SpaceX lost nearly $5 billion in 2025, raising real questions about whether the company can scale fast enough to reach any of these targets.
The Gap Between Musk’s Forecast and Wall Street Is Staggering
Musk posted the forecast on June 15, 2026, in direct response to Morgan Stanley’s published revenue model. “I think SpaceX might be able to reach approximately $1 trillion revenue in 2030,” he wrote.
He then doubled down: “I would be surprised if revenue is not greater than $1 trillion in 2031.” Morgan Stanley, one of the lead banks on the IPO, projects SpaceX will hit roughly $330 billion by 2030. Goldman Sachs puts it near $474 billion. Evercore ISI lands at $486 billion. Even the most bullish Wall Street number is less than half of Musk’s target. [4]
🔥 JUST IN: SpaceX overtakes Microsoft to become the world's fourth most valuable company by market cap. pic.twitter.com/IPvjXrQOKy
— Cointelegraph (@Cointelegraph) June 16, 2026
That gap matters. SpaceX reported $18.7 billion in total revenue for 2025, up 33 percent from the prior year. [13] To reach $1 trillion by 2030, the company would need to grow at a pace that has never been sustained by any company in modern history.
Not Amazon. Not Apple. Not even Nvidia at the peak of the artificial intelligence boom. The math alone should give any investor pause before treating Musk’s post as a financial forecast rather than a vision statement.
SpaceX’s IPO Numbers Tell a More Complex Story
The company went public on the Nasdaq stock exchange, selling shares at $135 each and raising roughly $75 billion. [10] The stock surged about 19 percent on its first day, pushing SpaceX’s market value above $2 trillion.
By day three of trading, the market cap briefly touched $3 trillion intraday, crossing Amazon and approaching Microsoft. Those are extraordinary numbers for a company that lost $4.94 billion in 2025 on $18.7 billion in revenue. [13] Investors are clearly buying the story of what SpaceX could become, not what it is today.
The IPO filing breaks out the business into segments. The Space segment, which covers rockets and launches, brought in $4.086 billion in 2025 but still lost money from operations. [14] The bigger revenue engine is Starlink, SpaceX’s satellite internet service.
The AI and computing infrastructure unit generated $3.2 billion in 2025 while recording a $6.4 billion operating loss. [18] That AI unit is where most of the long-term growth bets are placed — and it is currently the company’s biggest money loser.
The AI Bet Is the Entire Ballgame
Morgan Stanley’s model assumes roughly $190 billion of SpaceX’s projected $330 billion in 2030 revenue comes from AI infrastructure alone. [18] Goldman Sachs expects the AI business to grow nearly 100 times by 2030.
Evercore ISI analysts project AI will make up 74 percent of all SpaceX revenue by 2031, while the space and launch business shrinks to just 1 percent of the total. Those are remarkable forecasts from serious institutions. But they are still projections built on a business unit that today loses billions and operates in a brutally competitive market against Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.
SpaceX Passes Amazon in Market Cap on Day Three of Trading, Briefly Touches $3 Trillion Intraday
Since listing on the Nasdaq at $135 per share last Friday, SpaceX shares have climbed more than 50% and closed Tuesday at $201.https://t.co/KItee7fZ2f#UnbiasedHeadlines #News pic.twitter.com/WwxK5R8vA4
— Unbiased Headlines (@UnbiasedHdlns) June 17, 2026
Musk’s $1 trillion figure essentially requires SpaceX to win big in three entirely new industries at the same time: satellite broadband, AI computing infrastructure, and commercial launch services.
Doing all three simultaneously, at that scale, within four years, has no precedent. That is not a reason to dismiss SpaceX entirely. The company has already done things that seemed impossible. But a social media post is not a financial plan, and investors deserve more than a vision before pricing a company at $3 trillion.
One Real Risk Nobody Is Talking About Loudly Enough
Musk controls roughly 79 percent of SpaceX’s voting power while holding about 42 percent of its equity. [12] The company intends to operate as a “controlled company,” which lets it skip requirements for an independent board majority. Musk simultaneously serves as chief executive, chief technology officer, and board chair.
That structure means ordinary shareholders have almost no ability to push back if the strategy veers off course. For a company asking the public to trust a $3 trillion valuation on the strength of one man’s forecast, that governance setup deserves far more scrutiny than it is currently getting.
Sources:
[4] Web – Elon Musk forecasts a trillion-dollar revenue for SpaceX by 2030
[10] Web – Musk predicts SpaceX could hit $1T revenue by 2030 despite $4.94 …
[12] Web – SpaceX completes IPO at $135, prices 638.9M shares | SPCX 8-K …
[13] Web – Space Exploration Technologies – S-1 – SEC.gov
[14] Web – [PDF] SpaceX – IPO Letter – Office of the New York State Comptroller
[18] Web – [PDF] Space Exploration Technologies – S-1/A#2 – Fidelity Investments













