The Spillover
The scale of the SpaceX IPO is dominating financial headlines, but the more important story might be what the sale reveals about the structure of modern capital markets, corporate governance, and the blurry line between public and private investing. This episode unpacks what the numbers actually show, why much of the popular narrative is overblown, and what investors should actually be paying attention to. Hosts: Sebastian Mallaby [https://www.cfr.org/experts/sebastian-mallaby], Paul A. Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics, Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) Rebecca Patterson [https://www.cfr.org/experts/rebecca-patterson], Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) We discuss: * How the SpaceX IPO could raise around $75 billion, making it the largest IPO in history, and value the company at $1.77 trillion. * How subsequent IPOs by Anthropic and OpenAI could bring a wave of funding valued at close to $200 billion in total. * Why the equity supply panic is overblown. * SpaceX's alarming governance structure, under which Musk serves as CEO, CTO, and chairman simultaneously, holding a supermajority of votes despite a minority equity stake. * How growth equity, unlike traditional private equity, offers zero oversight, often granting founders supervoting shares and investor loyalty pledges that amount to anti-governance rather than governance. * How SpaceX's initial index weight will be tiny, since only a small fraction of the company will actually be publicly floated. * How the S&P's profitability requirement is a deliberate lesson from the dot-com bust. * Why SpaceX's revenue projections sound dazzling but tell only half the story, given that estimated capital expenditure could far outpace revenue through the end of the decade. Mentioned on the Episode: “IPOs: Number and Proceeds [https://www.sec.gov/data-research/statistics-data-visualizations/initial-public-offerings-ipos/ipos-number-proceeds],” U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Jason Dean, “U.S. Officials Said to Discuss Taking Stakes in AI Companies [https://www.theinformation.com/briefings/u-s-officials-said-discuss-taking-stakes-ai-companies?rc=hp7hes],” The Information Natalia Emanuel, Emma Harrington, and Amanda Pallais, “Remote Work Leaves Younger Workers Sidelined [https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2026/06/remote-work-leaves-younger-workers-sidelined/],” Federal Reserve Bank of New York Want to keep up with The Spillover? Sign up to receive an email alert [http://cfr.org/newsletters/#podcasts] when new episodes are released. The Spillover is a production of the Council on Foreign Relations. The opinions expressed on the show are solely those of the hosts and guests, not of the Council, which takes no institutional positions on matters of policy.
20 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der The Spillover-Community!