SpaceX could start preparing for an initial public offering within days, so investors already have the money to make it happen. The Information reported Tuesday that Elon Musk’s startup is considering filing an initial public offering prospectus with regulators as soon as this week. Advisors said in a report that the company could raise more than $75 billion, making it the largest IPO in history. SpaceX is reportedly considering a Nasdaq listing while vying for early entry into the Nasdaq 100 index. Some of the funds with exposure to SpaceX are listed below. SpaceX is Baron Partners Fund’s (BPTRX) largest holding, accounting for nearly a third of the total portfolio. Along with Tesla, which is also run by Mr. Musk, the pair accounts for more than half of BPTRX’s holdings. The fund’s retail stocks will fall about 5% in 2026, according to Morningstar data. In 2025, it rose more than 24%, putting it in the 7th percentile of comparable funds. SpaceX also accounts for nearly a quarter of the Baron Focused Growth Fund (BFGIX). Tesla follows, accounting for just over 6% of holdings. The fund’s institutional shares will fall more than 4% in 2026, according to Morningstar. However, the fund has continued to generate double-digit returns for three years, according to Morningstar. SpaceX represents 18% of Cathie Wood’s ARK Venture Fund (ARKVX). Anthropic, Databricks and Groq are also among the private companies the fund is involved with. ARKVX is poised to rise more than 6% in 2026 after gaining more than 55% last year. The Private-Public Crossover ETF (XOVR) has nearly 45% exposure to SpaceX. By comparison, Nvidia is the next largest holding at about 4%. The ETF is down about 15% so far this year. The fund added nearly 12% in 2025, according to Morningstar, but was in the bottom quartile of comparable products. Among individual stocks, Echostar, which is seen by the market as a proxy for SpaceX, soared 8% on Wednesday following reports of an IPO. The stock is up about 10% this year, on top of a 375% rise in 2025.
