Elon Musk has always set his sights on cosmic targets, but SpaceX’s upcoming IPO has caused the billionaire to switch its focus from a Mars city to the Moon. Musk revealed SpaceX’s current mission through his post on X, which explained that SpaceX now focuses on building a “self-growing city on the Moon” instead of his previous plan of constructing a city on Mars.

Musk explained his plans to shift the focus of developing Mars, because Mars needs 20 years to become operational, while Moon city development requires less than half the time. Musk considers Mars to be an active project, but at the moment he has chosen to stop making it his primary focus.

Musk said,

“SpaceX will still do Mars in parallel, but the critical path to a self-growing Moon city is faster. The Moon city can be made to be self-growing in less than half the time of Mars”.

The Pull of IPO

This strategic shift comes at a very convenient time. SpaceX plans to make its stock market go public in the upcoming summer, according to current expectations June is being considered as a potential date. However, Wall Street analysts show more interest in revenue than establishing a city on Mars.

The three main revenue producers for SpaceX that investors are a lot interested in include its reusable rocket launches, its expanding Starlink satellite internet business, and its developing orbital data center concept.

Musk proposed the Moon as a space base, which will serve as both a launch site and an infrastructure development center. The concept sounds futuristic, because it includes space infrastructure development, and it also seems crucial as it will generate revenue.  

Selling the Story

The storytelling elements of this IPO also need to match its engineering requirements, because they both serve as essential components for this particular IPO. SpaceX is currently considering an astonishing valuation, which reaches to a $1.5 trillion and they plan to raise up to $50 billion through their upcoming public offering, which will become the largest in financial history

The existence of lunar factories and satellite networks provides better value justification than the three-decade development schedule of Mars projects, which will generate returns only after the current market analysts retire. On the other hand, the Moon provides a real experience, which will bring financial benefits soon.

Musk’s Expanding Universe

SpaceX and Musk’s AI startup, xAI, had a merger agreement last week, which established their combined value at $1.25 trillion, which makes it the most valuable merger in U.S history. The merger combines X.com with xAI, after Tesla made its $2 billion investment in the AI company.

The SpaceX IPO generates financial resources for the company, while it establishes Musk as a key figure in his expanding technological business network. Also, before any dilution, Musk will hold approximately 42% of SpaceX, while the company SpaceX needs to achieve a valuation of $1.6 trillion for Musk to become the first trillionaire in history.

Bottom Line

Musk’s decision to move from Mars exploration to Moon exploration might seem like a repeated change of his opinion, but it actually demonstrates his movement from a fictional narrative to a business-driven practical approach.

The concept of a self-sustaining colony on Mars remains highly unrealistic, because it requires an effort of developing a whole new planet. SpaceX needs to raise unprecedented amounts of money from the public, but the Moon provides a more practical and profitable path to achieve its funding goals. Also, the process will bring Musk closer to becoming a trillionaire. 


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