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SpaceX Paid Vendor in Shares at $420 Strike Price, 409A Valuation Shows Musk Obsession

My First Million · The most simplified breakdown of the SpaceX IPO on the internet · June 12, 2026
SpaceX Paid Vendor in Shares at $420 Strike Price, 409A Valuation Shows Musk Obsession
My First Million
My First Million
The most simplified breakdown of the SpaceX IPO on the internet
"They did a project where they paid a vendor in shares and the strike price of the shares was like $4.20. I think it was like $42.20 or something like that. And then I think that when they did like a 409A valuation for Twitter, it was like I'm screwing up the exact numbers, but I think if it was $42 billion, they made it like $42 billion, like 420. And like, if you do like a Ctrl+F 420, it's all, it's everywhere."
Analysis of SpaceX's S-1 filing revealed that the company repeatedly embedded the number 420 into vendor payments, share strike prices, and valuations, including Twitter's 409A. The hosts characterized this as Musk's "most tryhard" quality, questioning whether it represents a marijuana reference or an attempt to appear relatable.

About this episode

Podcasters analyze the SpaceX S-1 filing ahead of the largest IPO in history, valued at $1.75 trillion. The hosts describe their approach as "two idiots in an S-1," offering relatable rather than technical analysis of a company that dominates space launches with 85% market share and has rapidly scaled its Starlink internet service to 10 million subscribers generating $11 billion in annual revenue. SpaceX's business spans rocket launches, satellite internet via Starlink, Twitter/X, and xAI, with ambitious plans for space-based data centers that would deliver AI compute from orbit. The hosts detail Musk's extraordinary compensation structure: the Mars Award requires both a $7.5 trillion market cap and a permanent self-sustaining colony of 1 million people on Mars, worth $135 billion in shares at current valuation, while the AI CEO Award requires delivering 100 terawatts of compute from space data centers—100 times the entire US electric grid. They explore how SpaceX pivoted from failed ventures like Twitter's declining ad revenue and Grok's inability to compete with ChatGPT by renting the massive Colossus data center to Google and Anthropic for over $1 billion monthly. The conversation reveals peculiar S-1 details including repeated use of the number 420 in valuations and that early investor Antonio Gracias will make $90 billion from his 7% stake. The hosts conclude with discussion of Sam Bankman-Fried's forfeited $114 billion portfolio and Ontario Teachers' Pension Fund's $12 billion windfall, ultimately framing the IPO as polarizing: rational analysts see unsustainable 100x revenue multiples while optimists see the "price-to-Elon ratio" as the only metric that matters.

Key takeaways

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