TLDR
- Bloomberg reported that SpaceX filed a confidential IPO draft with the SEC.
- The filing could put SpaceX on track for a June market debut.
- The report said SpaceX may list before OpenAI and Anthropic.
- Sources said the filing details are private and not yet public.
- Bloomberg said the SpaceX deal could become the biggest-ever listing.
Breaking: Elon Musk’s SpaceX has filed confidentially for an IPO, according to Bloomberg. The report said the company sent a draft registration to the US Securities and Exchange Commission. That move could place SpaceX on track for a June listing. SpaceX has not publicly confirmed the filing mentioned in the report.
Confidential filing starts the formal IPO path
Bloomberg cited people familiar with the matter for the filing report. Those people were not named because the matter is private. That route is common for large US listings.
A confidential filing lets a company work with regulators before public release. It also keeps early financial details out of public view. For now, the SpaceX draft remains private.
SpaceX has stayed private while raising funds in private markets. A public sale would give more investors access to the company. It would also require regular public reporting after listing.
SpaceX could list before OpenAI and Anthropic
Bloomberg said SpaceX may be the first of three large offerings. OpenAI and Anthropic could follow later, based on the report. Bloomberg described them as potential mega-IPOs.
The report described SpaceX as a rocket, satellite, and AI company. Its work includes launch services and Starlink’s satellite internet business. The AI link adds another theme to the offering story.
Bloomberg said the deal could become the “biggest-ever listing.” Final valuation, price range, and share count remain unknown. Market conditions can still affect the final size and timing.
What investors may watch next
After a draft filing, the SEC often reviews the papers in private. The company can then revise numbers, risks, and business details. That process can take weeks or longer.
Investors will watch for revenue, profit, and cash flow figures. They will also look for any valuation goal in future filings. Governance terms and voting rights may draw attention as well.
The Bloomberg report did not include those financial details. It also did not say how much money SpaceX may seek. A June debut remains a target, not a guarantee.





