Kalo te përmbajtja
  • EN
  • SQ
  • IT
  • FR
  • ES
  • DE
  • EL
VA-NEWS VA-NEWS
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Health
  • Technology
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
LIVE
Navigation

VA-NEWS

  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Health
  • Technology
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
Shortcuts
Home Latest
LIVE
Gjuha
  • EN
  • SQ
  • IT
  • FR
  • ES
  • DE
  • EL

Search news

  1. Kryefaqja
  2. Opinion
  3. The SpaceX IPO made Musk a trillionaire. The old rules of capitalism no longer apply | Robert Reich | The Guardian
Opinion

The SpaceX IPO made Musk a trillionaire. The old rules of capitalism no longer apply | Robert Reich | The Guardian

• June 12, 2026 • 5 min read
◉ WhatsApp 𝕏 X
News

Elon Musk is now the world’s first trillionaire, after his SpaceX exploration and satellite company went public on the Nasdaq on Friday.

With shares priced at $135 each, Musk’s aerospace and satellite maker soared to an overall market valuation of approximately $1.77tn – which raised Musk’s net worth (which had already hovered at the astronomical $813bn) into the $1tn stratosphere.

What does this tell you about capitalism in this era? That it’s no longer based on economic principles as they’re taught in school – prices set by supply and demand. It’s now based on hype, connections and total, arbitrary control.

First, the hype.

Musk priced SpaceX stock at roughly 100 times the company’s total revenue in 2025. This is ballsy, to say the least, given SpaceX’s consistent negativeprofitability and its failure to meet prior goals.

Read more:Let this be a warning – if Europe worries about Trump, it has even more reason to fear JD Vance | Gaby Hinsliff | The Guardian

Granted, it’s difficult to predict the value of activities that don’t yet exist, such as SpaceX’s stated mission to “extend the light of consciousness to the stars”. Interstellar space travel and interplanetary habitation are inherently speculative endeavors.

But SpaceX’s initial public offering is nothing more than a show of faith in Musk.

Much of SpaceX’s “value” comes out of a deal Musk negotiated between SpaceX and his artificial intelligence startup, xAI. Musk essentially made that deal with himself. A magic trick, out of thin air!

The closer you look at the SpaceX IPO, the more it looks like Musk’s ill-fated Doge. It also bears a striking resemblance to Trump’s takeover of the US government.

Read more:William Saliba fit for France’s World Cup bid – sources

All of it is arbitrary – based on the hype and will of one man with a giant ego and an insatiable thirst for money and power. It’s built on self-dealing. There’s no accountability. No checks. No balances.

As to connections, look no further than Brendan Carr, the chair of the Federal Communications Commission. He’s been a Musk booster from the start. In fact, Musk recommended him to Trump as the perfect leader for the agency.

Since then, Carr has approved regulatory requests for Elon Musk’s SpaceX and its Starlink satellite internet – allowing Musk to gain control of two-thirds of all active satellites, more than 10,300, in low Earth orbit, and giving SpaceX dominance over global internet access and defense communications.

Even as Carr led the way to Musk’s near monopoly on low-Earth orbit satellites, Carr also commenced an investigation into a rival satellite company, EchoStar, after Musk’s company complained about it. Carr also threatened to revoke the broadcast licenses of NBC and ABC over their unfavorable coverage of Trump.

Read more:Aging brain health: Vitamin C levels linked to gray matter volume

Finally, Musk will have total control over SpaceX. Shareholders won’t have any voice whatsoever. Each share held by Musk will have 10 times the voting power of a share offered to the public. SpaceX’s board of directors will engage in a pantomime. They’ll have no meaningful authority.

None of this would be of particular cause for concern if investors could decide for themselves whether the downside risks and potential upside gains from buying SpaceX stock were worth the price. That’s called a “market”. Caveat emptor.

But many of us, if not most of us, with any savings parked in major stock indices (yours truly included) won’t have any choice. We’ll invest in SpaceX whether we want to or not. That’s because the major indices have been rigged.

Read more:Cristiano Ronaldo on his World Cup fitness for Portugal: Have you not seen me play?

Normally, major stock indices have a waiting period before they plow their investors’ money into a newly formed company, in order to test whether that company is worth it. But SpaceX has lobbied index funds to change the rules.

On 1 May, for example, the Nasdaq 100 implemented a new “fast entry” rule that will include companies among the top 40 most highly valued companies – which will almost certainly include SpaceX just days from now.

Presto! A big chunk of Americans’ retirement savings and pensions (as well as university endowments) will automatically be tied to SpaceX’s market value. At the same time, all that automatic infusion of investment will artificially jack up the value of SpaceX, at least in the short term.

But here’s the real kicker. SpaceX insiders will be able to sell their shares sooner than is usually the case with an IPO, because that’s the way the SpaceX IPO has been organized.

Read more:My experience of restrictive avoidant eating and ADHD

This means they can enjoy the stocks’ upward tide as the major indices force millions of investors to buy it, and then they can exit SpaceX before the tide goes out.

Musk is now a trillionaire, but a lot of innocent people could be shafted by this IPO, perhaps without their even noticing. It could be a huge redistribution from most of us to Elon and his buddies.

I don’t want to sound cynical, but this is the sort of thing that brings out the cynicism in me. It’s the story of rot at the core of American capitalism in this Second Gilded Age.

Read also
Opinion

Data is not enough: from Covid to measles, America must relearn risk communication | Lynne Peeples | The Guardian

Opinion

Welcome to ‘the Claw’: the White House fighting cage captures Trump era rot | Sidney Blumenthal | The Guardian

Tags: #comment #Elon musk #Has #Internet #Nasdaq #Opinion #Spacex #Stock markets #Travel #Will

Journalist

From the same category
  • Data is not enough: from Covid to measles, America must relearn risk communication | Lynne Peeples | The Guardian
  • Welcome to ‘the Claw’: the White House fighting cage captures Trump era rot | Sidney Blumenthal | The Guardian
  • Trump keeps insulting female journalists. It’s time for the press to stop tolerating it | Margaret Sullivan | The Guardian
  • Welcome to Trump’s World Cup, a depressingly angry version of football uniting the planet | World Cup 2026 | The Guardian
  • Alabama wants to execute a man by nitrogen hypoxia. That is cruel | Austin Sarat | The Guardian
From the same tags
  • Thomas Partey denied entry to Canada, will miss Ghana’s World Cup opener
  • Judge rules Trump can stage UFC fights on White House’s South Lawn this weekend
  • Judge denies Kennedy Center request for pause in ruling ordering Trump’s name removed from building
  • Michael Carrick gave Man United ‘another energy’ – Paul Pogba
  • Cristiano Ronaldo on his World Cup fitness for Portugal: Have you not seen me play?
Më të lexuarat — 48h
  1. 01
    Opinion Data is not enough: from Covid to measles, America must relearn risk communication | Lynne Peeples | The Guardian 6 lexime · 4 hours ago
  2. 02
    Football FIFA’s Infantino: Better to ‘chill’ over World Cup visa issues 4 lexime · 2 days ago
  3. 03
    Football 2026 World Cup poll: U.S. excited for tournament, tempered USMNT expectations 4 lexime · 1 day ago
  4. 04
    Football Jesse Marsch: We ‘had to beg’ USMNT players to sing national anthem 4 lexime · 5 hours ago
  5. 05
    Opinion Trump’s claims about California vote-rigging are a grim preview of November | Moira Donegan | The Guardian 3 lexime · 1 day ago
  6. 06
    Opinion Welcome to ‘the Claw’: the White House fighting cage captures Trump era rot | Sidney Blumenthal | The Guardian 3 lexime · 8 hours ago
  7. 07
    Lifestyle Shakira, Andrea Bocelli and Salma Hayek kick-start the World Cup at opening ceremony in Mexico City 3 lexime · 19 hours ago
Similar articles
Opinion

Data is not enough: from Covid to measles, America must relearn risk communication | Lynne Peeples | The Guardian

Two unfolding outbreaks continue to command global attention. As a hantavirus outbreak tied to a cruise ship appears…

• 4 hours ago • 8 min read
Opinion

Welcome to ‘the Claw’: the White House fighting cage captures Trump era rot | Sidney Blumenthal | The Guardian

“If the government decides, very quickly, to bulldoze the Statue of Liberty – the people whose ancestors that…

• 8 hours ago • 10 min read
Opinion

Trump keeps insulting female journalists. It’s time for the press to stop tolerating it | Margaret Sullivan | The Guardian

For many years now, Donald Trump has been saying awful things to – or about – the female…

• 8 hours ago • 5 min read
VA-NEWS VA-NEWS

Modern portal of reliable, independent and multilingual news. Accurate information, every day.

  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • News
    • World
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Football
  • uncategorized
  • © 2026 VA News. Made with ♥ in Albania
    ⌂ Home ◷ Latest

    Powered by
    ►
    Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
    None
    ►
    Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
    None
    ►
    Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
    None
    ►
    Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
    None
    ►
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    None
    Powered by