SpaceX closed its first week of public trading at a $182 billion valuation after pricing 147 million shares at $86 per share, raising $12.6 billion in the largest U.S. IPO since Alibaba's $25 billion offering in 2014. Three days later, Google formalized a compute rental agreement worth $920 million per month—$11.04 billion annually—for access to SpaceX's distributed GPU and CPU clusters, establishing immediate commercial traction for the company's pivot from launch services to infrastructure leasing.
The IPO allocation followed a two-tier structure. Institutional investors received 91 million shares at the $86 price through traditional underwriters led by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Retail platforms including Charles Schwab, Fidelity, Robinhood, SoFi, and E-Trade distributed the remaining 56 million shares, though allocation mechanics varied by broker and final retail pricing floated between $86.50 and $88.20 depending on platform execution timing. First-day volume reached 89 million shares, with the stock closing at $92.14 on Friday, a 7.1% gain from institutional pricing.
The Google contract represents the first public validation of SpaceX's compute infrastructure thesis. The deal grants Google reserved access to 340,000 NVIDIA H100 equivalents and 1.2 million CPU cores distributed across SpaceX's low-latency ground stations, which the company repositioned from Starlink consumer internet nodes to enterprise compute clusters beginning in Q2 2025. Google's $920 million monthly commitment exceeds the company's entire annual spend with Oracle by 34% and matches 22% of its total Google Cloud Platform infrastructure budget, suggesting the partnership addresses specific latency or sovereignty requirements traditional hyperscalers cannot meet. SpaceX has not disclosed whether the GPU inventory is owned outright or leased from suppliers, though filings indicate $4.8 billion in capital expenditures during the twelve months preceding the IPO, with $3.1 billion allocated to "ground infrastructure modernization."
The timing creates unusual market dynamics. SpaceX enters public markets with $11 billion in contracted annual revenue from a single customer before investors have visibility into gross margins, capacity utilization rates, or the company's capital intensity relative to traditional cloud providers. AWS generated $26.3 billion in Q1 2026 revenue at 38% operating margins; if SpaceX operates at half that margin on the Google contract alone, the deal contributes $2.1 billion in annual operating income, justifying roughly $42 billion of the company's public valuation at a 20x multiple before accounting for launch services, Starlink consumer subscriptions, or additional compute customers.
Operators should track Q2 earnings in August for the first margin disclosure and any commentary on additional signed compute contracts. Google's deal includes a public filing requirement if SpaceX adds any customer committing more than $500 million annually, creating a forcing function for visibility. The IPO lockup expires 180 days from pricing, putting early employee and venture holders free to sell in mid-December. Watch for capacity announcements: SpaceX must add roughly 200,000 additional GPU equivalents by Q1 2027 to meet internal projections disclosed in roadshow materials, requiring either continued capex burn or third-party leasing agreements that would pressure margins.
The company reports Q2 results on August 12th. Google's contract includes a renegotiation clause at the 24-month mark.