Topline views from three sources and TSO verification:
Source 1 (Reuters as republished by Yahoo Finance) says SpaceX plans to fix its IPO price at $135 per share, aims to raise $75 billion, and is targeting a valuation of $1.75 trillion; the roadshow is set to begin on Thursday.
Source 2 (CNBC) says SpaceX plans to list on Nasdaq on June 12, with the same fixed offer price of $135 and the same $1.75 trillion valuation; it also says an amended filing reserves up to 5% of shares for certain employees and related parties.
Source 3 (PitchBook) focuses on the pricing mechanism, saying SpaceX is moving away from the traditional price discovery process and adopting a fixed-price approach, while emphasizing strong support from underwriters and the possibility of more giant IPOs ahead.
TSO verification: The three sources align on the two core points of “fixed pricing at $135” and “a valuation of about $1.75 trillion.” On the raise amount, Source 1 explicitly says $75 billion, while Sources 2 and 3 do not give a specific figure. On roadshow and listing plans, Sources 1 and 2 both mention timing, but their wording differs, so the provided sources do not allow a full confirmation of a single consistent schedule.
Facts confirmed by multiple sources:
SpaceX is moving ahead with IPO preparations.
The offer price is expected to be fixed at $135 per share.
The valuation is pointed at about $1.75 trillion.
The transaction is described by sources as an unusual pricing arrangement that departs from the traditional price discovery mechanism.
Main differences or disputed points:
Raise amount:
Source 1 explicitly says it will “raise a record-setting $75 billion.”
Sources 2 and 3 do not mention a specific fundraising amount.
Listing timing:
Source 1 says only that the “roadshow begins Thursday.”
Source 2 says it is “planned to debut on Nasdaq on June 12.”
Source 3 does not mention a specific date.
Whether these are the same stage or fully consistent cannot be confirmed from the provided sources.
Employee share allocation:
Only Source 2 mentions an “amended filing reserving up to 5% of stock for certain employees and persons.”
The other two sources do not mention this, so it cannot be cross-confirmed.
Background and analysis:
Source 3 shows that this IPO is seen as a clear break from traditional pricing: instead of relying on market bookbuilding to determine the final offer price, it uses a fixed-price plan.
Sources 1 and 2 reinforce the scale of the deal: the $135 per-share price and roughly $1.75 trillion valuation show that attention is centered on the valuation anchor and offering structure, not just the fundraising itself.
However, the sources provided do not offer enough detail on why this structure is being used, how underwriting support works in practice, or what the practical impact of employee reserved shares will be.
Regarding the broader label of a “2026 IPO,” the provided sources only confirm that the company is in the listing-preparation stage and that there are roadshow and Nasdaq listing plans. If a more specific year assignment or full timeline is required, the sources do not provide enough information to verify it.
Three-source summary:
Source 1: SpaceX plans an IPO at $135 per share, aiming to raise $75 billion and valuing the company at $1.75 trillion, with the roadshow starting Thursday.
Source 2: SpaceX plans to list on Nasdaq at a fixed $135 price, with a $1.75 trillion valuation, a June 12 debut, and reserved shares for certain employees and related parties.
Source 3: SpaceX’s pricing method departs from traditional price discovery, the fixed-price approach has underwriter support, and it may draw attention to more future mega-IPOs.
Conclusion:
Taken together, the three sources confirm that SpaceX is advancing an IPO plan with fixed pricing at $135 per share and a valuation of about $1.75 trillion. But the fundraising amount, listing date, and employee allocation details are not covered consistently across all sources, so those points should be clearly marked as “mentioned only by some sources” or “cannot be confirmed from the provided sources.”