By Aditya Soni and Sayantani Ghosh
April 24 (Reuters) – Elon Musk is touting SpaceX as humanity’s ticket to Mars. But the company’s pitch to investors for a potentially historic IPO reveals that its main business will be the same as Big Tech: building artificial intelligence.
The difference is in how the companies fund โthe spending. While Alphabet and Microsoft have deep operating cash flows, SpaceX is bankrolling its push with revenue from rockets and satellites, leaving it with a cash-burn profile โcloser to a late-stage startup than a trillion-dollar incumbent.
SpaceX’s satellite broadband business, Starlink, doubled its operating income last year to $4.42 billion, easily covering the loss incurred in its space division, which is spending heavily on a new satellite-carrying โrocket, showed excerpts of the company’s IPO registration reviewed by Reuters.
That has emboldened Musk to remake SpaceX as an AI-first company, dramatically shifting its spending profile.
In 2025, the AI division – home to xAI – accounted for 61% of the consolidated company’s $20.74 billion total capital spending. At the same time, rising costs pushed the unit to an operating loss of $6.4 billion. Yet with plans to build an armada of space-based data centers, SpaceX spending is not likely to slow any time soon.
“What investors will be looking for is clear visibility on how the business model evolves with this financing and โwhether it can make the economics of compute work at scale,” โ said Melissa Otto, head of research at S&P Global Visible Alpha.
“In many ways, SpaceX looks like a super-sized startup.”
BIG TECH HAS HUGE REVENUE, PROFIT
While SpaceX’s outlay is super-sized by most measures, it is dwarfed by Silicon Valley rivals. Google parent Alphabet, Microsoft, Instagram owner Meta, along with Amazon โ and Oracle, are set to collectively spend more than $600 billion on AI this year.
Big tech also generates far more revenue from existing businesses spanning digital advertising, cloud computing and enterprise software, giving those companies both a longer runway to keep spending on the technology and a cushion if AI demand falls short of expectations.
That difference matters as SpaceX prepares what could be the largest initial public offering in history, โtouting โa total addressable market of $28.5 trillion – much of it tied to AI for businesses.
While the company is โaiming to raise $75 billion in its IPO at a valuation of $1.75 trillion, โit may have to return to the markets in a few years if capital spending growth continues to outpace that of revenue. Its capital spending more than doubled last year, exceeding revenue by roughly $2 billion.