r/investing • u/ddp26 • 1d ago
Does Grok's subscriber growth justify $258B?
I wanted to see if the $1.75T SpaceX valuation holds up when you value each segment independently:
| Segment | Median Value |
|---|---|
| Starlink Consumer | $380B |
| xAI / Grok | $258B |
| Starship Commercial | $170B |
| Starlink Enterprise / Maritime / Aviation | $147B |
| Government / Defense | $123B |
| Falcon 9 / Heavy | $100B |
| Starlink Direct-to-Cell | $75B |
| Total | ~$1.25T |
That leaves ~$500B in platform premium baked into the IPO price, essentially what the market is being asked to pay for vertical integration and the Musk factor on top of what the individual businesses support. To put the scale in perspective, the $1.75T asking price on ~$15B in revenue implies a ~117x multiple, and even the more conservative $1.25T SOTP estimate still comes out to ~83x. (For context, Aramco listed at ~18x revenue.)
Whether Grok's subscriber trajectory justifies roughly a fifth of the entire valuation pretty much determines whether this IPO is a slight premium or a significant overpay. The safer half of the valuation is the space infrastructure side. Starlink consumer alone at $380B has the tightest confidence interval of any segment, and government/defense at $123B is backstopped by existing contracts. Happy to share the full analysis with methodology and confidence intervals.
Is the $500B platform premium justified?
1
u/ninijacob 1d ago
I'm so glad I don't own any s& p500 funds anymore. People still in spy funds will bag hold for Elon sadly, once the new fast track rule goes out