Welcome to our dedicated page for Space Exploration Technologies SEC filings (Ticker: SPCX), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SPCX) SEC filings begin with the S-1 registration statement and its amendments, the documents behind the company's June 2026 initial public offering. The S-1 contains the first audited financial statements of the combined SpaceX and xAI business and remains the foundational disclosure of how the company defines its Space Launch, Connectivity, and AI segments.
As a Nasdaq-listed reporting company, SpaceX files quarterly reports (10-Q) and annual reports (10-K) with segment-level results for launch services, Starlink, and the AI business, plus current reports (8-K) for material events such as major contracts, financings, or corporate changes. Insider activity appears in Form 3 initial ownership statements and Form 4 transaction reports from directors and officers.
Items worth attention in SpaceX filings include segment revenue and operating income, capital expenditures on AI data center infrastructure and the Starship program, related-party arrangements among the combined entities, and risk factor updates covering launch operations, satellite regulation, and AI development.
For a company spanning rockets, a satellite constellation, a social platform, and frontier AI models, the filings are where the full financial picture of each business is disclosed in one place.
SPACE EXPLORATION TECHNOLOGIES CORP filed an initial ownership report for Elon Musk, who is listed as CEO, CTO, Chairman and a more than 10% owner. The filing shows large indirect holdings of Class A and Class B Common Stock through entities such as the Elon Musk Revocable Trust, EM 2024 GRAT-A and other trusts.
The report also discloses an option to buy 350,000,000 shares of Class B Common Stock at an exercise price of $8.3998 per share, expiring on February 11, 2031, which is fully vested and exercisable. Multiple series of preferred stock are held indirectly and, upon completion of the company’s initial public offering, each share of certain preferred series will automatically convert into 50 shares of either Class A or Class B Common Stock. Each share of Class B Common Stock is convertible at any time into one share of Class A Common Stock and will convert automatically upon sale, according to the disclosed terms.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. is registering 555,555,555 shares of Class A common stock in an initial public offering at an expected price of $135.00 per share. All shares are being sold by the company, with an additional 83,333,333 shares available to underwriters under a 30‑day option.
The Class A stock carries one vote per share, while Class B carries 10 votes per share, creating a dual‑class structure. After the offering, Elon Musk is expected to hold about 82.4% of the total voting power through Class A and Class B holdings, leaving the company a controlled company under Nasdaq rules.
SpaceX highlights three main businesses: launch services, its global Starlink connectivity network, and a rapidly scaling AI segment built around Grok and large data‑center infrastructure. In 2025 it generated consolidated revenue of $18,674 million, with Space and Connectivity providing most revenue and the newer AI segment operating at a loss as it invests heavily for growth.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) is planning an initial public offering of its Class A common stock on Nasdaq under the symbol “SPCX.” The company will have a dual‑class structure, with Class A shares carrying one vote and Class B shares ten votes each, leaving Elon Musk with majority voting control and making SpaceX a “controlled company” under Nasdaq rules.
SpaceX operates three major businesses: launch services, Starlink connectivity, and a fast‑growing AI segment built around the Grok frontier model and the X platform. In 2025, SpaceX generated consolidated revenue of $18,674 million, with a loss from operations of $(2,589) million and Adjusted EBITDA of $6,584 million. For the three months ended March 31, 2026, revenue was $4,694 million, with a loss from operations of $(1,943) million and Adjusted EBITDA of $1,127 million.
The Space segment produced $4,086 million of revenue in 2025 but remained loss‑making as SpaceX invested heavily in Starship and other programs. Connectivity, led by Starlink, generated $11,387 million of 2025 revenue and $4,423 million of operating income, while the AI segment recorded $3,201 million of revenue and a substantial operating loss as SpaceX built gigawatt‑scale compute clusters such as COLOSSUS.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) has filed a Form S‑1 for an initial public offering of its Class A common stock on Nasdaq and Nasdaq Texas under the symbol “SPCX.” The filing describes a dual‑class structure in which Class A shares carry one vote and Class B shares carry 10 votes.
After the offering, Elon Musk is expected to control the outcome of shareholder votes through his holdings of Class A and Class B stock, and SpaceX will qualify as a “controlled company” under Nasdaq rules. The prospectus outlines three integrated businesses across Space, Connectivity and AI.
In 2025, SpaceX generated consolidated revenue of $18,674 million, loss from operations of $(2,589) million and Adjusted EBITDA of $6,584 million. For the three months ended March 31, 2026, revenue was $4,694 million, loss from operations was $(1,943) million and Adjusted EBITDA was $1,127 million.