Visualização normal

Received before yesterdayNegócios

Elon Musk has broken the rich list

23 de Junho de 2026, 09:16
Elon Musk's net worth exceeds $1 trillion.
Elon Musk's net worth exceeds $1 trillion.

Matt Rourke/AP

  • Elon Musk is too rich for the rich list.
  • The Tesla and SpaceX CEO, worth $1.1 trillion, is wealthier than the next four richest people combined.
  • Musk lost more than Warren Buffett's entire net worth on Monday.

Elon Musk is now so wealthy that he's making a mockery of the rich list.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO was worth $1.08 trillion as of Monday's market close, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The next-richest person in the world, Alphabet cofounder Larry Page, was less than a third as wealthy with a net worth of $299 billion.

In fact, Musk is richer than the next four people in the billionaire rankings: Page, his cofounder Sergey Brin, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison, who were together worth $1.06 trillion as of Monday's close.

The sheer scale of Musk's fortune means shifts in others' fortunes now pale in comparison. For example, Page, Brin, and Bezos each lost more than $10 billion in Monday's tech rout.

Those losses look paltry compared to Musk's $152 billion wealth decline on the same day, fueled by a 16% plunge in SpaceX's stock just days after its blockbuster IPO.

Put differently, Musk lost in one day a sum that exceeds Warren Buffett's entire fortune. The 95-year-old investor and Berkshire Hathaway chairman ranked 10th on Bloomberg's list with a $146 billion net worth at Monday's close.

Given Musk has a $700 billion-plus lead over anyone else, he simply looks out of place on a mere billionaires list. He's started a trillionaire club with only one member.

The wealth gap between Musk and his rich-list peers has only grown truly stark in the past few months. In fact, Ellison briefly leapfrogged him in September to become the world's richest person despite being worth less than $400 billion.

The key reason for Musk's net worth skyrocketing has been SpaceX's soaring valuation, which has boosted his fortune by $456 billion in less than six months, per Bloomberg's list.

That wealth gain has catapulted Musk into a league of his own and given him a seemingly insurmountable lead over the rest of the billionaire pack.

The yawning divide reflects Musk's large stakes in two companies valued at over $1 trillion: Tesla and SpaceX. It's hard to see anyone catching up to him, barring a massive crash in either company's stock price, given nobody else has two horses of that size in the wealth race.

Read the original article on Business Insider

ARTIGO: O maior IPO da história já tinha 424 anos

21 de Junho de 2026, 10:11
da navegação ao espaço

Haia, Holanda. 1602. Johan van Oldenbarnevelt não dorme há três noites. É o homem mais poderoso da República. Advogado. Grande Pensionário da Holanda. E acaba de fazer a aposta mais insana de sua vida. Forçou seis companhias rivais, que se odiavam, a virarem um único organismo. Convenceu mercadores, viúvas e sapateiros a entregarem suas economias […]

O post ARTIGO: O maior IPO da história já tinha 424 anos apareceu primeiro em NeoFeed.

O dia após o IPO recorde: SpaceX fecha compra da Cursor por US$ 60 bilhões

16 de Junho de 2026, 10:50

A SpaceX firmou o acordo definitivo para comprar a Cursor, em uma transação que avalia a startup de codificação por IA em US$ 60 bilhões. Os investidores da Cursor terão o direito de receber ações da SpaceX com base no valuation implícito de US$ 60 bilhões, segundo documento divulgado pela companhia na manhã de terça-feira, […]

O post O dia após o IPO recorde: SpaceX fecha compra da Cursor por US$ 60 bilhões apareceu primeiro em NeoFeed.

I was an early SpaceX employee. My equity helped me pay off student loans, buy a home, and make risky career moves.

Gambit founder and early SpaceX employee Josh Giegel is pictured.
Josh Giegel worked at SpaceX from 2009 to 2012. He's now the CEO of Gambit.

Josh Giegel

  • Josh Giegel joined SpaceX in 2009 and worked there for 3 years. He says the equity he received has been "liberating."
  • Giegel's SpaceX equity has allowed him to put a down payment on a house and help pay off his wife's student loans.
  • "The equity also allows me to take a lower salary at my startup," Gambit, he said, and that means he can hire more people.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Josh Giegel, the 41-year-old cofounder of the AI startup Gambit, who lives in Los Angeles. It's been edited for length and clarity.

I was in grad school at Stanford, finishing my master's and wanting to do a Ph.D.

I had worked at NASA the previous summer, and one of the women I worked with was also a Stanford graduate, and was like: "You're going to be so bored at NASA. Why don't you check out this small space company in Los Angeles called SpaceX?"

I applied and interviewed in the two weeks between flight three and flight four of Falcon 1. I interviewed with Elon; he was still interviewing pretty much everyone at the time. I remember going back to my advisor and saying, "There's nothing I'd rather do on the planet than what he just described."

My Master's ended at the end of 2008, and I began in 2009.

I was on what's called the propulsion analysis team, which was four or five people. Our responsibility was: How do you design the first reusable rocket engine? A very small group of us was responsible for the initial stuff that was on Falcon 9.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying a payload into space.

Paul Hennesy/Anadolu via Getty Images

I started there when I was 23, and I left when I was 27. It was a little bit of naive immaturity. I knew I wanted to start a company one day, and SpaceX was growing like crazy. I wanted to be on a founding team. I still love the company; I almost went back two or three years later before I ended up starting a company of my own.

The IPO is pretty cool. I'm on a bunch of text threads with guys who were there around the same time, and a couple of them are still there. It's cool to see just how big it became.

When I got there, and they gave the offer, there was an equity component. I remember the HR woman who was going over it with me saying, "We think some day, in 10 or 15 years, this might be worth $250,000-300,000." I distinctly remember her saying, "It might get you a nice down payment on a house in Los Angeles."

We all laugh about it now. But, at the time, the saying was: the fastest way to become a millionaire in space is to start as a billionaire.

Buybacks have been really regular for the last 10 years. Every now and then, we'd take a little bit out. For example, we paid off my wife's student loans a number of years ago. We put down a down payment on a house.

I joke: We did actually get a down payment on a house! She wasn't lying when she said that. It's a house that, on our normal salaries at startups, we wouldn't have been able to afford without that additional windfall.

We also love traveling. We've got a seven-year-old and a one-year-old. We're going to go on slightly more adventurous trips because of it.

My wife is also thinking of doing a larger career change that would come with a decent salary reduction, which she probably wouldn't have been able to do without something like SpaceX.

Professionally, I've always been risky. If the majority of your net worth is tied up in a rocket company, you must be a risk-tolerant individual.

Gambit is a VC-backed company. We've raised about $15 million to date, and there are a couple more investment rounds that are coming. The IPO puts you in a position where folks with a substantial amount of equity could be interested in becoming investors.

At least ten of the people I worked with intimately have started their own company. There was a band that I played in with five SpaceX people; four of us started our own companies. I played guitar.

That whole ecosystem can fund its own endeavors and each other. The quantum of capital that they can put in is not like your typical family and friends round. That's typically $20,000, $50,000, maybe $100,000. Here, that could be on the order of $1 million, maybe $2 million per check.

You also become a bit of a mercenary, asking, "I don't need a paycheck from what I'm going to go do, so what am I going to go do?" It's liberating.

The equity also allows me to take a lower salary at my startup, so that I can go out and hire more people to make my company more successful.

Read the original article on Business Insider

SpaceX: como o apelo do IPO foi além da euforia do mercado em torno das ações

14 de Junho de 2026, 05:00

(Bloomberg) –Wall Street passou a última semana oscilando entre a macroeconomia e a euforia.

Os investidores analisaram dados mistos sobre a inflação, desdobramentos positivos no conflito do Oriente Médio e oscilações bruscas nos preços do petróleo. Ao mesmo tempo, a corrida por exposição à SpaceX se estendeu muito além da oferta pública inicial de ações da empresa, com investidores buscando maneiras alternativas de participar de uma das estreias na bolsa mais aguardadas dos últimos anos.

O resultado foi um mercado com dificuldades para se consolidar em uma narrativa única, com investidores oscilando entre desenvolvimentos macroeconômicos e operações especulativas. Segundo uma métrica, o Nasdaq 100 registrou esta semana suas maiores oscilações médias intradiárias desde abril de 2025.

A SpaceX tornou-se o ponto crucial da semana. Investidores de varejo enviaram mais de US$ 100 bilhões em pedidos para a oferta, superando em muito as alocações disponíveis por meio de corretoras.

Mas, diferentemente de frenesis anteriores de IPOs, a demanda não se limitou ao livro de ofertas tradicional. Investidores que não conseguiram garantir ações buscaram exposição em outros lugares. Isso ajudou a impulsionar grandes fluxos de entrada pré-IPO em fundos, incluindo o ETF Baron First Principles de US$ 2 bilhões, além de alimentar a atividade em uma rede crescente de plataformas de negociação alternativas.

A Polymarket gerou mais de US$ 25 milhões em volume de negociações em contratos relacionados à SpaceX. Essa atividade também se estendeu aos mercados nativos de criptomoedas, com investidores negociando contratos futuros perpétuos vinculados à empresa na plataforma descentralizada Hyperliquid. O que antes seria uma simples história de IPO passou a se desenrolar simultaneamente em diversas plataformas de negociação.

“O fato de estarmos vendo uma proliferação de ETFs atrelados a ações populares demonstra o momento atual”, disse Peter Atwater, presidente da consultoria Financial Insyghts. “O público agora está especulando com base em seu próprio impulso maníaco, utilizando toda a força que consegue encontrar.”

Mais de 20 ETFs ligados à SpaceX já foram registrados, abrangendo desde produtos alavancados e inversos até estratégias baseadas em opções. Um ETF alavancado atrelado à SpaceX teve uma alta de mais de 80% antes de praticamente paralisar suas negociações na sexta-feira, segundo dados compilados pela Bloomberg e informações publicadas no site da bolsa Cboe, devido a preocupações regulatórias.

As empresas emissoras de ETFs, que antes esperavam meses após um IPO para lançar produtos relacionados, agora correm para registrar seus pedidos quase imediatamente, o que demonstra a rapidez com que Wall Street se mobiliza para atender à demanda especulativa.

“Certamente há espaço para especulação, mas eu prefiro que os investidores invistam”, disse Nancy Tengler, CEO da Laffer Tengler Investments, que tem uma convicção de longo prazo na empresa.

Os produtos usados ​​para expressar visões especulativas estão se tornando grandes o suficiente para influenciar as negociações no mercado em geral. Estrategistas da Nomura estimam que os ETFs alavancados, de forma mais ampla, geram atualmente cerca de US$ 8 bilhões em demanda de rebalanceamento para cada variação de 1% no mercado, enquanto o posicionamento em opções contribui com bilhões a mais.

O Barclays Plc estimou recentemente que fluxos semelhantes ligados aos principais ETFs alavancados dos EUA atingiram um recorde antes da onda de vendas ocorrida no início deste mês. Esses produtos não determinam a direção do mercado, mas podem amplificar as tendências predominantes, transformando explosões de entusiasmo — ou ansiedade — em oscilações maiores.

“O ecossistema especulativo também indica oscilações maiores em torno de ações relacionadas, porque quando a exposição é construída por meio de produtos alavancados e sintéticos, as altas e as baixas podem ocorrer mais rapidamente do que os investidores esperam”, disse Chris Murphy, co-chefe de estratégia de derivativos do Susquehanna International Group.

As oscilações da semana refletiram a rapidez com que o foco do mercado mudou. Dados relativamente moderados da inflação ao consumidor impulsionaram inicialmente os ativos de risco. Um dia depois, dados mais fortes sobre os preços ao produtor levantaram novas dúvidas sobre as pressões de custos. Enquanto isso, os comentários do presidente Donald Trump sobre o Irã alteraram repetidamente as expectativas para o conflito e fizeram com que o petróleo e as ações se movessem em direções opostas. Na sexta-feira, as esperanças de um avanço diplomático ajudaram a impulsionar as ações novamente.

“O acordo de paz intermitente está provocando fortes oscilações de curto prazo no nível do índice, tornando mais desafiador analisar e investir em ações individuais”, disse Michael O’Rourke, estrategista-chefe de mercado da JonesTrading. “Isso complica a situação enquanto as empresas tentam navegar em meio à euforia.”

Cautela?

Sinais de cautela surgiram em meio ao fervor especulativo. A Susquehanna apontou para uma atividade considerável de hedge em ETFs de semicondutores, incluindo grandes compras de proteção contra quedas no ETF de semicondutores da VanEck. Mesmo enquanto os investidores buscavam histórias de crescimento, outros se posicionavam para oscilações maiores no futuro.

A SpaceX foi a obsessão dominante da semana. Mas a notícia mais importante é a facilidade com que os investidores agora podem participar — e construir exposição a — um negócio que antes poderia ter sido restrito principalmente a investidores institucionais.

Para Aaron Korff, um empresário de 55 anos da Flórida que dirige uma empresa de software de gerenciamento de transporte de veículos, a oferta da SpaceX era impossível de ignorar. Korff disse que nunca havia investido em um IPO antes, principalmente porque considerava o processo complicado. Desta vez foi diferente. Ele enviou sua solicitação pela E-Trade na segunda-feira e recebeu uma parte das ações antes da abertura do mercado na sexta-feira, embora a enorme demanda tenha feito com que ele recebesse apenas um quarto do seu pedido inicial.

Ainda assim, Korff disse que o apelo ia além da euforia do mercado em torno das ações.

“Quem se importa se as ações sobem e descem? Você ama a empresa? Acredita no futuro dela? Esses são os motivos certos para investir nela”, disse ele. “Elon Musk fará tudo o que estiver ao seu alcance para impulsionar os negócios. Veja o que ele já fez com a SpaceX.”

© 2026 Bloomberg LP

The post SpaceX: como o apelo do IPO foi além da euforia do mercado em torno das ações appeared first on InfoMoney.

OpenAI, Anthropic e SpaceX viram “fábrica de fortunas”: 20 bilionários e 16 mil milionários a caminho

12 de Junho de 2026, 18:12

A SpaceX deu a largada ao que deve ser um período de grandes IPOs nos Estados Unidos, gerando uma nova leva de bilionários aos rankings da Bloomberg e da Forbes. Um levantamento feito pela consultoria Sacra para o jornal The New York Times (NYT) estima que as megalistagens de SpaceX, Anthropic e OpenAI devem criar […]

O post OpenAI, Anthropic e SpaceX viram “fábrica de fortunas”: 20 bilionários e 16 mil milionários a caminho apareceu primeiro em NeoFeed.

Elon Musk vira trilionário e passa a valer mais do que 198 países e toda a bolsa brasileira

12 de Junho de 2026, 15:03

O empresário Elon Musk se tornou a primeira pessoa no mundo a ostentar (ao menos no papel) o título de trilionário, um nível de riqueza impressionante, muito acima do PIB e do valor de mercado de muitas companhias. A SpaceX estreou nesta sexta-feira, 12 de junho, na Nasdaq, após precificar seu IPO em US$ 135 […]

O post Elon Musk vira trilionário e passa a valer mais do que 198 países e toda a bolsa brasileira apareceu primeiro em NeoFeed.

What SpaceX's filing shows about Elon Musk's web of companies

21 de Maio de 2026, 16:12
elon musk laughing
Elon Musk's companies pay each other hundreds of millions of dollars a year, according to SpaceX's S-1.

ODD ANDERSEN/AFP via Getty Images

  • The newly public SpaceX S-1 reveals how closely Elon Musk's companies are connected.
  • Last year, SpaceX was involved in more than $660 million worth of payments, goods, and services with the ventures.
  • Here's a look at how SpaceX is intertwined with Tesla, The Boring Company, and more.

Step right up to Elon Musk's financial merry-go-round.

Tucked more than 200 pages into SpaceX's S-1 paperwork, which the company filed on Wednesday, is an outline of how interconnected Musk's various companies are, including through more than $660 million in payments, goods, and services involving SpaceX and his other ventures last year.

Musk has his hands in many pots. In addition to being the CEO of aerospace company SpaceX, he's the CEO (and "Technoking") of electric carmaker Tesla, the founder of tunneling business The Boring Company, the cofounder of brain chip firm Neuralink, and was the CEO of xAI, until it merged with SpaceX in February. In various ways, the companies are all intermingled.

SpaceX said in the filing that there may be "conflicts of interest," but ultimately, they benefit investors.

It's not uncommon for companies with certain ties to do business with one another and to spell out these relationships in a prospectus filing when they plan to go public. The breakdown in SpaceX's S-1 is the first look we're getting at some of its connections, including SpaceX's deals with The Boring Company or its purchase of Tesla Cybertrucks.

The biggest expenses between the companies fell under the banner of "commercial, licensing, and support."

Last year, SpaceX paid Tesla $144 million under such agreements, a figure significantly higher than in years past. xAI, then a separate entity, spent more, paying Tesla $506 million last year. xAI, then a separate entity, spent more, paying Tesla $506 million last year, while also bringing in $2 millon in revenue from Tesla.

The majority of SpaceX's cumulative $650 million in spending with Tesla was for Megapack products, Tesla's battery storage system. SpaceX also bought $131 million worth of Cybertrucks, which, at a starting retail price of $69,990 a pop, would be as many as 1,871 vehicles.

Additionally, Tesla paid $4 million last year to advertise on X.

Some expenses were driven by pure practicality: Tesla paid SpaceX $2 million to use its aircraft, X leased office space from The Boring Company for $1 million, and xAI rented space from the billionaire's umbrella company, Musk Industries LLC, for $2 million last year. SpaceX also spent $4 million on a security company owned by Musk for his personal security, as Tesla has done, per its filings.

Other expenses were mind-scratchers. SpaceX paid The Boring Company $1 million in connection with the construction of tunnels in Bastrop, Texas. These could be the tunnels connecting his facilities reported by local outlets, or they could be related to the chip facility SpaceX is building there.

Tesla and SpaceX's relationship is more than transactional

Musk's companies plan to continue doing business together, particularly Tesla and SpaceX, which, the company said, have a "strong and constructive partnership."

Tesla owns nearly 19 million shares of SpaceX stock. While that represents less than 1% of the company, at a target valuation of $1.5 trillion, those shares would be worth about $4.1 billion.

SpaceX and Tesla also have major projects in the works. The pair is developing Macrohard, an agentic AI platform, and, along with Intel, has partnered on Terafab, a manufacturing initiative that creates chips for Tesla's robots and vehicles, as well as SpaceX's orbital compute infrastructure.

The projects are set to be the beginning of a long relationship.

"We plan to explore other areas of strategic collaboration with Tesla in the future," the document says.

Read the original article on Business Insider

SpaceX bought Tesla Megapacks and $131 million worth of Cybertrucks, its IPO filing shows

21 de Maio de 2026, 13:57
A driver sits inside a Tesla Cybertruck near a SpaceX launch site.
SpaceX spent hundreds of millions of dollars on Tesla products in 2025.

SERGIO FLORES/AFP via Getty Images

  • SpaceX's IPO filing shows Elon Musk's companies are doing plenty of business with each other.
  • An analyst told Business Insider the spending makes sense if SpaceX needed the products.
  • It also shows how much SpaceX spent on Cybertrucks — and how that boosted the truck's sales.

Elon Musk's companies love to work together. Now, we have a bit more insight into how much money is moving between them.

On Wednesday, SpaceX filed its 277-page S-1, a document that peels back the curtain on the combined space-and-AI company's spending.

The filing showed that SpaceX (and its recently acquired fellow Musk company, xAI) bought hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of products from Tesla. Purchases included $697 million in Tesla Megapack products across 2024 and 2025, plus $131 million in Cybertrucks in 2025. The rocket company also bought an additional $34 million in Megapacks between January and March of this year.

The purchases were listed as "related party transactions."

The filing also described other ties between the companies — including work on voice-assistance features in Tesla vehicles, plans for a combined-use chip factory, and Tesla ad purchases on X.

"SpaceX and Tesla developed the early foundation of a strong and constructive partnership through a series of limited but successful commercial engagements," SpaceX wrote in the filing.

Seth Goldstein, an equity strategist at Morningstar who covers Tesla, said the related-party spending is "a little unique" to Tesla and SpaceX, but that the purchases themselves do not strike him as unusual.

"A company like SpaceX purchasing a large amount of work trucks and batteries for energy storage is not unusual and would be necessary for its business," he told Business Insider. "If what SpaceX is buying from Tesla or vice versa is necessary for its operations, then it makes sense."

Goldstein did say one element may raise investor eyebrows: SpaceX reported buying the Cybertrucks "at manufacturer's suggested retail price." He said most companies receive a discount when buying products in bulk.

That wording also offers a rare window into how many Cybertrucks may have gone to one of Musk's own companies.

Tesla sold 20,237 Cybertrucks in 2025, according to Kelley Blue Book. SpaceX did not reveal which trims it purchased, but based on Tesla's posted MSRP for the Cybertruck, the $131 million purchase would imply roughly 1,183 to 1,813 vehicles.

That means SpaceX's Cybertruck purchase could have represented about 6% to 9% of Tesla's Cybertruck sales last year.

SpaceX didn't respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Read the original article on Business Insider

We finally know how much Elon Musk's X is making in ad revenue

21 de Maio de 2026, 13:50
Elon Musk onstage at the World Economic Forum.
Elon Musk.

WEF

  • Elon Musk has had a rocky relationship with advertisers since acquiring Twitter in 2022.
  • Musk's X sued advertisers for allegedly violating antitrust law by boycotting the app.
  • New SEC filings show that X's efforts to win back advertisers haven't led to a bonanza.

Elon Musk's attempts to win over advertisers have yet to spark a major recovery in ad revenue for X.

In 2025, ad revenue for X (formerly Twitter) reached $1.8 billion, up around 7% from 2024. That said, revenue was down 21% from 2023 and about 59% from 2021, the year before Musk took over Twitter and began alienating some brands with looser content moderation.

Here were the stats:

YearAd revenueYoY change
2021 (pre-acquisition)$4.5 billion+40%
2023$2.3 billionN/A
2024$1.7 billion-26%
2025$1.8 billion+7%

X's ad revenue figures were revealed in an S-1 filing by SpaceX, X's parent company.

Since buying Twitter, Musk's relationship with advertisers has been rocky.

In 2023, he told marketers who were skipping out on X ads that they could "go fuck yourself."

Musk hired an ad industry veteran, Linda Yaccarino, in 2023 to help woo marketers. Yaccarino previously ran ad sales at NBCUniversal.

The drama with the ad industry didn't stop, though.

A year later, X sued an advertising trade group, The World Federation of Advertisers, and some members, including CVS, Unilever, and Mars, alleging they violated antitrust law by collectively withholding ad spend. A judge later tossed out the suit, citing a lack of jurisdiction and X's failure to state a claim under the antitrust laws.

Yaccarino left the company in July 2025.

Last year, there was industry chatter that Musk's entry into politics may have helped X's ad prospects. As Musk took on a high-profile role in the US government, some advertisers began spending on X again. Ad industry insiders previously told Business Insider that they felt buying ads on the app had become a cost of doing business to appease Musk and his allies in President Donald Trump's White House. Musk left his role, and his relationship with the Trump administration has since become more muddled.

Advertising's centrality as a revenue source for X diminished in March 2025 after Musk decided to merge the app into his artificial intelligence company, xAI. The company's AI revenue is growing much faster than its advertising revenue, reaching around $1.35 billion in 2025, a 52% increase from the previous year.

With the decision to merge xAI into SpaceX earlier this year, advertising now accounts for just a fraction of the combined company's $18.7 billion in 2025 revenue.

That doesn't mean X has stopped trying to improve its ad products.

Last month, X announced it had revamped its ads business to integrate more AI tools. This month, X rolled out a new tool that uses AI to connect brands with creators that might be a good fit for their campaigns.

Read the original article on Business Insider

SpaceX mira valuation de US$ 1,5 trilhão em contagem regressiva para o IPO

20 de Maio de 2026, 20:13

Após meses de especulação, a SpaceX tornou públicos os dados de suas operações no prospecto preliminar de seu IPO, que promete ser o maior da história da humanidade. O documento não traz os valores pretendidos pela companhia, mas o The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) afirma que a fabricante de foguetes comandada por Elon Musk pretende […]

O post SpaceX mira valuation de US$ 1,5 trilhão em contagem regressiva para o IPO apareceu primeiro em NeoFeed.

Musk rebate relatos de que SpaceX prepara venda de ações: ‘Não é correto’

6 de Dezembro de 2025, 18:40

O empresário Elon Musk negou neste sábado (6) as reportagens que afirmam que sua empresa de foguetes e satélites, a SpaceX, estaria lançando uma venda secundária de ações que poderia avaliar a companhia em US$ 800 bilhões.

“Tem circulado muita matéria dizendo que a SpaceX está levantando recursos a US$ 800 bilhões, o que não é correto”, disse Musk em uma publicação neste sábado em sua plataforma X. “A SpaceX tem sido geradora de caixa há muitos anos e faz recompras periódicas de ações duas vezes por ano para oferecer liquidez a funcionários e investidores”, afirmou.

Pessoas familiarizadas com o assunto disseram à Bloomberg News que a SpaceX está se preparando para realizar a transação. A notícia também foi dada pelo jornal americano Wall Street Journal, citando fontes.

Musk rebateu as notícias dizendo que a SpaceX já oferece liquidez aos investidores porque uma oferta secundária, como a que foi ventilada, serviria para permitir que funcionários e acionistas iniciais vendessem parte de suas participações, algo comum em empresas privadas que não têm ações negociadas em bolsa.

O negócio poderia levar a startup a ser a mais valiosa do mundo, superando o recorde anterior de US$ 500 bilhões estabelecido pela OpenAI, dona do ChatGPT, em outubro.

❌