IPOs

Musk’s most ambitious plan yet

By David Jeans and Echo Wang

NEW YORK, April 29 (Reuters) – In the days after the PayPal IPO in 2002, Elon Musk and company executives gathered at a Las Vegas casino to celebrate. But while others socialized by the pool, Musk was hunched over an old Soviet rocket manual and already planning his next venture: SpaceX.

“He’d come off what was an unequivocally big win, he was one of the largest shareholders, and ‌yet he was focused on this next thing,” Kevin Hartz, an early PayPal investor who was at the party, told Reuters. “Now it’s a multi-trillion-dollar business.”

In the two decades since Musk took the reins at SpaceX, the company has ‌grown into the world’s largest space business, launching thousands of Starlink internet satellites and pioneering reusable rockets, transforming the economics of space in a way Musk likens to inventing an airplane that no longer has to be destroyed after every flight.

Musk’s years of defying accepted logic through audacious risk-taking in space look set ​to be validated when SpaceX goes public this year at a possible valuation of $1.75 trillion, in what would be the largest public listing on record and one that could put him on track to become the world’s first trillionaire.

But what comes next may be an even bigger ask than building reusable rockets or the first mass-market electric vehicle, according to a Reuters review of more than 100 pages of excerpts from SpaceX’s confidential pre-IPO prospectus, offering the most detailed look at SpaceX’s financials and its future plans since Musk took the helm. Reuters published a series of exclusive stories based on the documents last week.

“I always thought he was crazy,” said Walter Isaacson, who spent two years shadowing Musk while writing a biography of the billionaire. “But the danger of betting against him is that he ends up ‌being crazy like a fox and gets things done.”

As if torn from the pages of ⁠one of Musk’s favorite books, Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, SpaceX’s prospectus recasts the company less as a maker of rockets and satellites and more as the future power in artificial intelligence, spanning space-based data centers and industries on the moon and Mars.

It promises to harness the sun for near-limitless energy to fuel the AI era, and declares that it will “make life multi-planetary, to ⁠understand the true nature of the universe and to extend the light of consciousness to the stars.”

“You want to wake up in the morning and think the future is going to be great,” reads an opening quote from Musk at the top of the document, known as an S-1, “and that’s what being a space-faring civilization is all about.”

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