pull down to refresh

So as someone who has looked at Starlink going back to when you could sign up for when they had access to your area they costs are dramatically lower and have continued to drop. Not only that, but they are signing more and more partnerships with major companies, airlines, service providers, etc. Frankly, no one can do what they do at the cost point.

SpaceX has been profitable for years now, even as they push Starship. They keep increasing their launch cadence and have a crazy backlog. SpaceX alone was the thing that could be worth a $ trillion market eval.

Nasdaq changed its rules for the Nasdaq-100 to ensure that SpaceX wouldn't go elsewhere for an IPO, since the TXSE (Texas Stock Exchange) just received its national securities exchange license. TXSE is aiming at companies and PE in the Southeastern part of the US, and what better way to launch yourself than by holding the SpaceX IPO.

To me, that is the reason behind the whole thing. TXSE is based in Dallas and has been gearing up to launch in 2026 or 2027, and an anchor launch with a company like SpaceX would make a hell of a statement.