Investment & Finance

SpaceX went public – Europe’s SpaceTech founders and investors have thoughts

SpaceX’s record €64 billion ($75 billion) IPO has created a new reference point for European SpaceTech founders and investors, raising questions over whether the listing will deepen investor appetite for the sector or further concentrate attention around one US category leader. Reuters reports that the company priced its IPO at

  • David Cendon Garcia
  • June 15, 2026
  • 0 Comments

SpaceX’s record €64 billion ($75 billion) IPO has created a new reference point for European SpaceTech founders and investors, raising questions over whether the listing will deepen investor appetite for the sector or further concentrate attention around one US category leader.

Reuters reports that the company priced its IPO at $135 per share, valuing the satellite, rockets and artificial intelligence company at around €1.52 trillion ($1.77 trillion).

For European SpaceTech, the listing is being read less as a single-company event and more as a test of how far space has moved into mainstream capital markets.

Space gets its public-market moment

For Mark Boggett, CEO of the British space investment firm Seraphim Space, the listing marks a shift in how public markets can understand the sector – outlining the VC perspective: “A SpaceX IPO is a landmark moment for the space economy. More than simply attracting additional venture capital, it would further establish space as a mainstream investment category and provide public market investors with a highly visible benchmark for the sector’s potential.”

Boggett adds that the impact could extend beyond venture capital: “A SpaceX IPO has the potential to bring additional capital into the asset class, increasing participation from institutional investors, wealth managers, retail investors, and public market participants.”

That broader capital-markets signal matters for Europe, where SpaceTech companies are building across launch, satellite infrastructure, Earth observation, communications, DefenceTech, climate intelligence, and space-enabled applications.

Europe reads the signal

While SpaceX remains closely associated with rockets and Starlink, several European voices argue that the largest implications may sit beyond launch.

For José Manuel Rodríguez, CFO of the Spanish SpaceTech company PLD Space, the IPO is best understood as part of the sector’s maturation, rather than as an isolated SpaceX story. He sees the wider public conversation around launch as useful for Europe, particularly as access to space becomes increasingly tied to national and regional infrastructure priorities.

This kind of movement is a natural evolution of the sector and, overall, a positive development. It helps bring visibility to an industry that, until recently, operated largely outside the public conversation,” says Rodríguez.

For PLD Space, that visibility also reinforces the case for European autonomy. SpaceX’s listing may validate the launch market, but it also underlines how important it is for Europe to continue developing its own competitive space transportation capabilities.

Beyond rockets and Starlink

That same theme – validation, but not automatic advantage – comes through in the response from Bruno Santos, co-founder and Head of R&D at the Luxembourg Space BioTech startup Exobiosphere.

Santos sees the IPO as a signal that space is becoming legible to generalist investors, but warns that capital may still flow first to the most visible parts of the market.

It’s the signal that tells generalist investors space is a real asset class and not a moonshot. That changes the room. Founders doing serious work in orbit start getting taken seriously, and money that wouldn’t have looked at the sector now does,” says Santos.

The risk, in his view, is that investors continue to focus on launch and constellations, while missing the application layers where space infrastructure could unlock value in other sectors. For Exobiosphere, that means drug discovery, disease modelling, advanced biomanufacturing, and other work that behaves differently in microgravity.

So the IPO makes ‘space’ investable much faster than it makes ‘space-enabled BioTech’ investable. That gap is the opportunity, and also where we get hurt,” says Santos. “Validation without capital just tells your better-funded competitors where to aim.”

Capital is not the only constraint

For Anatolii Papulov, CEO and co-founder of British SpaceTech startup NewOrbit, the IPO reflects a broader shift in how space infrastructure is valued, particularly as satellites become increasingly tied to telecommunications and data infrastructure on Earth.

However, his response also points to the scale of SpaceX’s lead, built through deep capital commitments, vertical integration, and the deployment of more than 10,000 spacecraft.

SpaceX’s IPO marks a genuine shift in how the market values space. It’s no longer treated as a curiosity or a moonshot, but has become essential infrastructure for life on Earth, particularly in telecommunications and, increasingly, data centres,” says Papulov.

Papulov argues that the IPO helps address one of SpaceX’s remaining constraints: capital. The harder problem is orbital capacity. As satellite numbers increase, congestion and collision avoidance become more central to the economics and safety of space infrastructure.

The two problems SpaceX still needs to solve are capital and finding the space to put their satellites. The IPO goes a long way on the first, but the second is much harder,” says Papulov.

In that sense, SpaceX’s IPO does not only validate space infrastructure as an investment category. It also highlights the technical and environmental constraints that the next generation of European SpaceTech companies will need to address.

The real test for Europe

Taken together, the responses suggest that European SpaceTech sees SpaceX’s IPO as validation, but not as a solution to Europe’s structural challenges.

The listing may bring more investors into the asset class and make space easier to explain to public markets. It also sharpens the question of whether Europe can match scientific depth and technical capability with sufficient growth capital, autonomous launch capacity, and infrastructure of its own.

For European founders and investors, the significance of the IPO is not only that SpaceX has reached public markets. It is whether the attention now spills into the less visible layers of the space economy, where many European companies are trying to build.

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