The financial world is buzzing with a radical theory regarding the future of Elon Musk’s empire.
While Wall Street has long anticipated a blockbuster SpaceX IPO, billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya and a bullish Wall Street analyst are each suggesting a far more disruptive path: a merger into Tesla.
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The No IPO Prediction
Chamath sparked intense debate by calling the absence of a SpaceX IPO his “most contrarian take for 2026.”
In early January, he argued that instead of a traditional public offering, Musk will orchestrate a reverse merger, effectively folding SpaceX into Tesla.
“My contrarian belief is I don’t think SpaceX will IPO … I think that it will reverse merge into Tesla, and I think Elon will use it as a moment to consolidate control and power of his two seminal assets into one cap table,” Palihapitiya said on the “All-In” podcast.
The Rationale:
- Consolidation of Power: Chamath believes Musk wants to collapse his “two seminal assets” into a single cap table to solidify control and avoid the dilution of a standard IPO.
- Valuation Arbitrage: Musk could supercharge Tesla’s valuation, moving it toward a $3 trillion conglomerate by merging it with SpaceX.
AI Ecosystem View
Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities echoed the sentiment on Tuesday, viewing the separation of Musk’s companies as increasingly artificial.
Ives said there is a “growing chance” Tesla will be merged into a combined SpaceX-xAI entity.
“The view is this growing AI ecosystem will focus on Space and Earth together… and Musk will look to combine forces,” Ives said.
Ives’ perspective aligns with recent moves, including the SpaceX-xAI merger, which created a $1.25 trillion entity focused on orbital compute.
Tesla recently disclosed in its fourth-quarter earnings release that it will invest approximately $2 billion into xAI, framing the move as a cornerstone of its Master Plan Part IV.
The two companies also signed a framework agreement to explore collaborations, which Tesla said will help scale its autonomous and robotic technologies.
Tesla Investor Dilemma
While the consolidation could solve funding needs for Mars colonization, it presents some risks:
Pure-Play Loss: Many investors prefer pure-play stocks and a merger could muddy the waters, potentially forcing institutional funds to sell Tesla shares if they are not permitted to hold aerospace assets.
Regulatory Scrutiny: Such a massive merger would face unprecedented antitrust and SEC hurdles, particularly given Musk’s 42% ownership of SpaceX and his ~13% stake in Tesla.
Tesla investors will be watching for more evidence of a pending SpaceX IPO or more investment and consolidation within Musk’s companies.
Photo: Shutterstock
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