SpaceX Passes Amazon in Market Value as AI Infrastructure Bets Surge - TechRepublic

SpaceX Passes Amazon in Market Value as AI Infrastructure Bets Surge

SpaceX Passes Amazon in Market Value as AI Infrastructure Bets Surge

Image: SpaceX / Flickr

SpaceX’s $2.7 trillion valuation puts Starlink, launch services, AI infrastructure, and vendor concentration risk in sharper focus for enterprise technology buyers.

Jun 17, 2026
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SpaceX’s valuation has moved faster than its enterprise roadmap.

The company briefly passed Amazon in market value on June 16, 2026, after a post-IPO rally pushed investors toward a sweeping bet on launch services, Starlink, defense work, and AI infrastructure. For enterprise technology buyers, the immediate case still rests on products they can evaluate today: connectivity, launch capacity, contracts, service terms, and vendor concentration risk.

Why investors are pricing SpaceX like an AI infrastructure company

SpaceX’s record IPO bundled several businesses into one market story: launch services, satellite broadband, defense work, and AI infrastructure. The company priced its IPO at $135 per share, raising $75 billion before beginning Nasdaq trading under the ticker SPCX on June 12.

By June 16, SpaceX had briefly surpassed Amazon in market capitalization. Amazon generated $78 billion in net income on $717 billion in revenue in 2025. SpaceX, by comparison, reported a roughly $4.9 billion net loss on $18.7 billion in revenue.

SpaceX is being valued less like an aerospace company than an AI infrastructure platform. Investors are pricing it as a future AI infrastructure platform, despite the gap between its current revenue and its market value.

SpaceX’s IPO materials framed its total addressable market at $28.5 trillion, with most of that tied to AI. Analysts have been more cautious, with Morningstar estimating SpaceX’s fair value well below its post-IPO trading price.

SpaceX added to that AI thesis with its $60 billion Cursor deal, gaining a major AI coding business days after its IPO. Orbital AI compute remains less proven.

Starlink and launch services are products organizations can evaluate today. SpaceX has compute commitments, including its Google-SpaceX compute deal, but orbital AI infrastructure still lacks mature pricing, service-level terms, and operating history.

Where SpaceX’s valuation meets enterprise risk

SpaceX’s enterprise business still starts with launch services and Starlink. The company completed more than 160 orbital launches in 2025, giving it a launch cadence competitors have struggled to match. Starlink also remains ahead in low-Earth-orbit broadband while Amazon Leo, which has FCC approval for 3,236 satellites, continues building out its network.

Starlink buyers should focus on pricing protections, outage remedies, service-level terms, data-handling requirements, and exit provisions. Musk’s voting control is also a vendor-governance factor because strategic direction can shift faster when control is concentrated. That makes contract flexibility more important than locking in long-term assumptions about SpaceX’s roadmap.

Enterprise teams should watch Amazon Leo’s deployment pace, SpaceX’s AI revenue disclosures, and post-IPO volatility. If Amazon reaches meaningful commercial scale before its 2029 deployment deadline, Starlink’s lead becomes less concentrated. If SpaceX does not separate AI revenue from launch and connectivity results, buyers should not build roadmaps around orbital AI infrastructure.

The market has repriced SpaceX faster than enterprise buyers can validate its newest business claims.

Also read: Nvidia’s planned debt sale shows how fast AI infrastructure leaders are turning market strength into expansion capital.