
of space x The initial public offering is testing whether Wall Street needs a new strategy.
The company, which begins trading on Friday, operates a business that doesn’t quite fit into the categories investors typically use. Elon Musk’s space company is more than just a rocket company, a satellite internet company, or a traditional defense contractor.
A good way to understand SpaceX is as a company that provides products that are integrated into the way civilian geopolitical infrastructure operates: governments, militaries, airlines, remote communities, and AI workloads.
That is the core of the “strategic technology” premium. High growth, national importance, and light regulation rarely combine in the same company at the same time.
SpaceX said in its IPO filing that the company will be the primary launch provider for the U.S. government in 2025, launching 11 of 12 national security space launch medium and heavy lift missions and all five U.S. crew and cargo transport missions to NASA’s International Space Station. About one-fifth of its 2025 revenue came from U.S. federal government agencies.
Traditional evaluations may be missing such an important role in government operations.
Regular technology companies are valuable because their customers choose them. Strategic technology companies are more valuable because their customers may have a hard time replacing them.
SpaceX already operates 10,000 Starlink broadband and mobile satellites in low-Earth orbit, accounting for about 75% of all operational maneuverable satellites in orbit as of March 31, the company said. Starlink now had 10.3 million subscribers, more than double the 5 million it had a year ago.
The bull case doesn’t just mean SpaceX can sell more satellite internet subscriptions. That means much of the world’s communications, defense, disaster response, aviation, maritime, and space infrastructure could begin to rely on networks.
But SpaceX is different from the defense giants to which it is often compared.
Mr. Musk’s space company sits between defense, technology and infrastructure. Although it has governmental importance, it also conducts large-scale commercial business. There is defense exposure, but it’s not the same as the valuation of a mature defense contractor. Although it is an infrastructure characteristic, it is not a utility-style regulation.
lockheed martin, RTX, Northrop Grumman, general dynamics and L3 Harris Although essential to U.S. national security, the upside for these stocks is shaped by the Pentagon. Most of their revenue comes from government contracts, and pricing, costs, and profits are subject to procurement rules and oversight.
For now, SpaceX has the best of both worlds: the pricing power of a technology platform and the indispensability of a national security contractor with a growth profile.
The public market is already paying for versions of this. Palantir.
Palantir is also an AI company, a defense contractor, and a government operating system. The company’s software is embedded in U.S. defense, intelligence and federal operations, and its revenues are growing at a pace that traditional defense companies can’t match.
Therefore, PE multipliers above 80x seem extreme compared to Defense Prime. The market isn’t just paying for growth. It comes at the cost of strategic importance.
SpaceX may be an expanded version of the same question. And it may not be the last.
Anduril, OpenAI, and Anthropic may also belong to the same broad strategic technology category. Anduril is building defense systems at Silicon Valley speed. OpenAI and Anthropic are at the heart of building AI infrastructure, including data centers, chips, power, and cloud capacity. Their models are also beginning to be leveraged in code, cybersecurity, research, defense, education, and healthcare workflows.
If AI becomes the next computing platform, the key model companies will be critical infrastructure, not just apps and chatbots.
However, there are pitfalls to the strategic high-tech premium.
The same dependencies that underpin higher valuations may ultimately lead to government control. When a company becomes too important, Washington usually wants a say.
That may be fine at first. A strategic position can bring contracts, subsidies, political support, and sustained demand. However, over time, mandatory access rules, defense oversight, procurement diversification, pricing pressures, and antitrust oversight and regulation may also emerge.
SpaceX’s own filings make clear that the company’s government activities already involve unique risks, including compliance with federal acquisition regulations, cybersecurity requirements, ethics rules and national security obligations. That obligation could expand further as SpaceX becomes the center of America’s launch, satellite and communications infrastructure.
That’s the tension Wall Street has to price.

