Elon Musk's SpaceX is in early-stage talks to potentially merge with either Tesla or xAI, according to reports from Bloomberg and Reuters. Such a merger could precede SpaceX's planned initial public offering this year. The discussions aim to consolidate resources among Musk's companies, building on recent investments and shared operations.
Reports indicate that SpaceX, Elon Musk's aerospace company, is considering mergers with Tesla or xAI as part of efforts to streamline operations ahead of a potential IPO. According to Bloomberg, insiders revealed that SpaceX has discussed the feasibility of a tie-up with Tesla, an idea pushed by some investors. Separately, the company is exploring a combination with xAI, Musk's artificial intelligence startup, prior to going public this year, as reported by Reuters.
These talks remain in early stages, with no public comments from representatives of SpaceX or xAI. A merger between SpaceX and xAI could integrate the Grok chatbot, the X social media platform—which xAI acquired last year for $33 billion, valuing xAI at $80 billion—and SpaceX's Starlink satellites and rockets under one entity. Meanwhile, a SpaceX-Tesla merger might align Tesla's electric vehicles and energy storage with SpaceX's space-based data center ambitions, something Musk has expressed interest in.
Recent corporate actions underscore the interconnectedness of these firms. SpaceX invested $2 billion in xAI last year, per The Wall Street Journal. This week, Tesla also committed $2 billion to xAI, following a shareholder vote last year that faced board hurdles due to abstentions. In 2024, SpaceX recorded $2.4 million in expenses from commercial agreements with Tesla, while Tesla spent $800,000 on Musk's use of a SpaceX jet.
Filings show two new Nevada entities, K2 Merger Sub Inc. and K2 Merger Sub 2 LLC, were established on January 21, hinting at merger preparations. SpaceX, founded in 2002 and valued at $800 billion in a recent secondary sale, is the most valuable private U.S. company. A Financial Times report suggests Musk aims to take it public in June, though his timelines often slip.
These potential consolidations align with Musk's pattern of resource-sharing among his ventures, potentially enhancing synergies in AI, space, and energy sectors.