SpaceX’s IPO filing and revealed exposure to Bitcoin have given crypto investors a formal benchmark for a company they started trading before the public markets received the prospectus.
On May 20, the company filed an S-1 submit with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), outlining the financial performance, risk factors and growth ambitions of Elon Musk’s rocket, satellite and artificial intelligence company, ahead of a planned listing under the ticker SPCX.
The potential listing could value SpaceX at around $1.75 trillion, making it one of the largest IPOs in market history. It could also make Musk the world’s first trillionaire.
With such a personal fortune, Musk’s wealth would exceed the combined market cap of the 10 largest crypto assets excluding Bitcoin, based on Crypto Slates current market cap table, which lists Ethereum, Tether, BNB, XRP, USDC, Solana, Tron, Hyperliquid and Dogecoin together at approximately $807 billion.


However, the filing’s crypto relevance goes beyond Musk’s wealth or SpaceX’s implied valuation.
The document gives traders a clearer picture of three areas that overlap with digital asset markets, including SpaceX’s Bitcoin holdings, X’s push into payments and banking, and a data center strategy that could ultimately compete with the AI infrastructure narrative now underpinning Bitcoin mining stocks.
SpaceX’s Bitcoin balance sheet
SpaceX’s most explicit crossover into the digital asset market is visible on the balance sheet, resolving years of industry speculation driven primarily by portfolio analysis and informal manager commentary
According to the S-1 filing, SpaceX held 18,712 Bitcoin as of March 31, 2026. The company disclosed a fair market value of approximately $1.29 billion for the position, compared to a historical cost of $661 million. This implies an average purchase price of approximately $35,324 per coin.


This revelation firmly entrenches SpaceX among the top ten corporate Bitcoin holders worldwide, and reflects a treasury philosophy popularized by companies like Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), which controls the largest corporate allocation with 843,738 BTC, and Musk’s sister company, Tesla, which holds a balance of 11,509 BTC.
Unlike dedicated corporate finance activities, SpaceX treats its digital asset holdings as an independent exposure to its balance sheet. However, public market accounting standards mean that these holding companies will introduce significant net income volatility for potential SPCX shareholders.
Current crypto fair value accounting guidelines require public companies to measure eligible digital assets at market prices on a quarterly basis, with unrealized gains and losses passed directly through their operating income statements.
The structural impact of this rule is highlighted in the company’s first quarter performance metrics. SpaceX reported that its nominal supply of 18,712 Bitcoin remained completely unchanged from the end of 2025 through the first quarter of 2026.
But as Bitcoin prices returned to the $70,000 level during the period after historic highs above $126,000, the reported fair value of the block fell from $1.64 billion to $1.29 billion.
This decline wiped out hundreds of millions of dollars in reported revenue without a single coin being liquidated.
The company stated that the coins are held at undisclosed third-party custodians and did not announce any plans for further acquisition or sale.
X’s ‘Everything App’ goal
The prospectus also outlines the business trajectory of social network X (formerly Twitter), revealing an operational roadmap that closely overlaps with the consumer utility thesis championed by crypto payments projects.
The filing describes
It also pointed to Money, a product that launched in beta in November 2025 as part of its effort to expand the platform’s usefulness through payments and financial services.
That brings X closer to the competitive field occupied by stablecoin issuers, crypto wallets and consumer finance apps.
Stablecoin companies are trying to gain payment volume by offering faster settlements, lower fees and programmable money. Wallet providers are trying to become the interface for balances, identity, token storage, creator payments, and peer-to-peer transfers.
X approaches the same activity from a distribution perspective, starting with a social network and layering financial tools into the user experience.
For the digital asset ecosystem, this model offers a two-sided structural outlook. If retail consumers can maintain balances, settle transactions, and compensate creators within a mainstream social platform, the consumer’s immediate incentive to navigate the onboarding complexities of standalone cryptocurrency wallets diminishes.
Conversely, infrastructure retains significant freedom of choice; If X eventually introduces digital asset rails or stablecoin settlement within its existing regulated payments layer, it would immediately become one of the world’s largest digital asset distribution networks.
SpaceX brings deeper capital into the Bitcoin miner AI business
Perhaps the most fundamental threat to the current crypto narrative lies in SpaceX’s artificial intelligence ambitions, which directly overlap with the power-and-compute pivot that underpins Bitcoin mining stocks.
Faced with increasing mining difficulties and halving pressure, public Bitcoin miners have spent the past two years redesigning their facilities to host artificial intelligence workloads. Miners have consistently pitched institutional investors on the value of their land rights, high-voltage substations and industrial cooling setups.
Industry estimates from companies like CoinShares suggest that public miners could generate up to 70% of their revenue from AI data hosting by the end of this year, after securing more than $70 billion in cumulative GPU colocation and cloud deals through early 2026.
SpaceX’s prospectus challenges this narrative by entering the same market with substantial capital. The filing estimates that the specific global market opportunity for AI computing infrastructure will be approximately $2.4 trillion, driven by an exponential increase in structural demand.
With this in mind, SpaceX wants to capture the multi-trillion dollar vertical infrastructure by offering its data centers to rivals.
It is striking that SpaceX is already monetizing this infrastructure on a large scale through its recent merger with xAI and the expansion of its enormous computer clusters.
The regulatory documents show that AI developer Anthropic has entered into a binding agreement to pay SpaceX nearly $45 billion over the next three years to secure dedicated computing capacity for its Claude AI models.
The contract calls for monthly payments of $1.25 billion running through May 2029, with a short step-up discount applied in May and June 2026. Either entity can terminate the agreement with 90 days’ written notice.
The filing shows that SpaceX plans to sign identical computing resource leases with other third-party companies in the future, building out massive internal GPU clusters and leasing excess capacity to third-party developers as internal training loads fluctuate.
This operational framework reshapes the competitive dynamics for digital asset stock portfolios.
For Bitcoin miners, SpaceX is not an immediate replacement for terrestrial data centers. Miners still have an advantage in existing network access, developed locations and shorter conversion timelines.
However, SpaceX brings a different competitive profile. It has a larger capital base, a broader technology platform, and a long-term goal of deploying solar-powered data centers directly into orbit, using Starlink’s laser-mesh satellite network to completely bypass traditional bottlenecks in the terrestrial network.
That creates a new pressure point for mining stocks. The investor case for miners has improved as AI customers require power and data center capacity outside of traditional hyperscaler pipelines. SpaceX shows that the same shortage attracts companies with deeper balance sheets and larger technology ecosystems.
Miners will have to prove that they can offer cost, speed or reliability advantages that larger competitors cannot easily match. Otherwise, the AI linchpin that helped support their valuations could become a busier trade.
