RE: Space X et al10 Jun 2026 22:51
So money of different flavours is getting pulled out of the market, to follow the greatest hype ever
International Man: SpaceX appears poised to become the largest IPO in history, potentially coming public at a valuation far beyond anything we’ve seen in a traditional tech listing. What’s your overall take on this surge in mega-cap tech IPOs, and SpaceX in particular?
Doug Casey: Ever since I was a little kid, I’ve loved space, rockets, and science fiction. However, parts of SpaceX’s offering document read like a sci-fi novel. It’s pretty far out—as is the price of the offering.
That said, I applaud Elon’s successes, not least of which is SpaceX. But engineering success is not necessarily a predictor of stock market success. Remember the old saying: "High tech? Big wreck!" High-tech bubbles are often the final bell ringing at the top of the market.
As for SpaceX, the company is basically divided into three parts. One is SpaceX itself, which is about launching rockets; that part is mildly profitable, and I see a real future for it. The second part is Starlink, where they make significant money. I use it, and it’s great. But the bulk of their spending, use of funds, and losses is for AI. I want no part of it.
SpaceX is basically a conglomerate with three unrelated businesses. Might as well add on an airline, a screen door company, and maybe a submarine builder for diversification. Who cares if you’re raising megamillions?
The other two gigantic offerings coming soon, Anthropic and OpenAI, are pure bets on AI. Include me out.
So we’ve got three trillion-dollar IPOs coming out this summer. And as much as I love some aspects of AI, it’s pretty clear that this is beyond a bubble. It’s a super bubble. And I think I hear not just one, but a symphony of bells ringing at the top of this market.
Elon has a quirky sense of humor. Maybe, among the billion robots he expects to build, he will reincarnate that clunky robot from the old series "Lost in Space". Just to warn us, "Danger, Will Robinson. Extreme Danger!" as we heard in almost every episode. Now would be a good time for its AI to look at the market and give us that retro-sounding verbal warning.
International Man: When you look at SpaceX, AI companies, and the broader wave of tech listings, do you see echoes of the late-1990s dot-com boom?
Doug Casey: Yes, and not just the dot-com boom. The 1920s stock market boom was loaded with the tech companies of the time—car manufacturers. There were hundreds of small automotive companies. They all went bust, leaving only GM, Ford, and Stellantis. FWIW, today they’re all managed by women, DEI hires, and people who hate cars. It’s the circle of hi-tech life.
RCA, Radio Corporation of America, was the Nvidia of its day, going 200-1 in the 20’s. The gigantic tech boom of the 60’s featured scores of meme stocks with suffixes like -onics or -ex. The public bought anything with a name that signaled technology. FAMILIAR?