Two firms read the same filing and priced it a trillion dollars apart

SpaceX has filed an amended prospectus that sets up the largest initial public offering in history. The numbers are now fixed rather than rumored. The company will sell 555.6 million Class A shares at $135 each, raising roughly $75 billion, at a valuation near $1.77 trillion. That would make SpaceX the seventh-largest company in the United States on its first day of trading, ahead of Tesla and Meta, and would eclipse Saudi Aramco's 2019 debut as the biggest listing ever attempted. Trading begins on the Nasdaq on June 12 under the ticker SPCX.

Also, Morningstar's analysis suggests a fair value for the SpaceX IPO of $780 billion, less than half.

That is the story. Two serious institutions looked at the identical document. They arrived at numbers a trillion dollars apart, and a great many sophisticated people are about to commit capital without being able to say which is closer to the truth. That is not a pricing problem. It is an intelligence problem, and it is the clearest illustration this year of why reading the operating environment is a discipline, not a reflex.

This is where the SIGNAL Framework™ earns its place. The discipline of executive intelligence is not about collecting more inputs. It is knowing which inputs carry weight, where the noise is engineered rather than incidental, and how to separate the two before you act. The SpaceX offering is a near-perfect test, because the signal and the noise come apart cleanly once you decide to look.

Start with the real inputs. SpaceX reported $18.674 billion in 2025 revenue, up 33 percent year over year. Starlink alone accounts for roughly $11.4 billion of that and grew about 50 percent. The company launched 83 percent of all mass sent to orbit from Earth last year. Those are the load-bearing facts, and they are why even the skeptical valuation places a value of around $611 billion on the core launch and connectivity businesses. On the rockets and the satellites, the bull and the bear largely agree.

The disagreement lives in one place: the AI business folded in through the xAI merger. Morningstar values that piece at roughly $170 billion in probability-weighted scenarios and calls its economic moat indeterminate, which is analyst language for "we cannot tell you what this is worth, and neither can anyone else." Almost the entire trillion-dollar gap is a bet on an asset no one can model with confidence. The core business is knowable. The premium is a wager. Then comes the engineered noise on top of it: Musk comparing SpaceX to Tesla's IPO; a deliberately thin float of roughly 3 percent; a rule change positioning the stock for forced index-fund buying; Jamie Dimon walking JPMorgan's clients through the deal. None of it is illegitimate. All of it is designed to shape how the offering is understood before anyone reads the business clearly. The discipline is noticing that the loudest inputs are the ones built to be loud.

Here is the part that matters for the executive who does not run a rocket company. When you are the one being valued, the market runs this same process on you, and most of what it prices is not your fundamentals. So run it on yourself first.

Three steps, and you can start.

One: Separate your own story into the part that is knowable and the part that is a bet. SpaceX's knowable core is $611 billion. Its premium is an unmodelable AI asset. Your company has the same split. Name the revenue, the contracts, the operating facts a skeptic would concede, and then name the part of your valuation that rests on a story about the future. Be honest about which is which.

Two: Find the number the market will fill with a narrative rather than a model, because there is always one. For SpaceX, it is the AI premium. For you, it might be a pipeline, a category you claim to be creating, a regulatory outcome, or a founder's track record. That is the number that moves your valuation, and it is the one you cannot leave to others to define.

Three: Own that number's framing before someone else sets it. Morningstar set SpaceX's framing this week, in public, with a headline that traveled. The lesson is not that SpaceX should have stayed quiet. It is that the unmodelable number gets a story attached to it, whether or not you write the story. The companies that win decide they will be the author.

Reading the world accurately is the work of SIGNAL. Spreading an idea until the market prices it the way you want is the work of E-STOCK™, and the SpaceX roadshow is a textbook execution of it.

Most companies will never set their own valuation narrative the way Musk is. But every company is being read on the same terms, and the reading happens before the decision lands, not after.

Enjoy the ride + Plan accordingly.

-Marc

I help senior executives + founders sound like the smartest person in the room on what’s coming next — and know how to talk about it. | Founder @ Caracal Global + Brigadoon. | DET + WAS + EDI + LON

The Communicating Caracal Global | May 29, 2026

May 29, 2026 

Communications at the intersection of globalization, commerce, and governments. Five situations where the story being shaped matters more than the facts on the ground, plus a win and a loss of the week.

The lead: The White House is running two foreign policies and reconciling neither

The most important communications failure of the week is a government that cannot give the same answer to the same question twice.

Over five days, the administration signaled a deal to end the Iran war was close, then, at a Cabinet meeting, Trump said that rising economic costs would not push him into a deal. Brent crude whipsawed from $144 to below $100 as the message changed. The New York Times described the president's posture on Iran as driven by mood and moment rather than any discernible strategy, and a PBS Frontline documentary built the same case from inside the war cabinet.

For executives, the lesson is not about Iran. It is about what happens to any organization that lets its narrative move with the mood of the room. When markets cannot tell a pause from a peace, they price confusion, and confusion is expensive. The discipline that protects a company here is the one most leaders skip: deciding what you will say, to whom, and in what sequence, before the event forces you to improvise. Strategic incoherence is now a planning variable at the highest level of the US government. Assume your stakeholders have noticed, and build communications consistency that the headlines are not giving them.

The reputational risk in your vendor stack is now a security risk

Reuters reported that US military personnel deployed to war zones are being targeted using commercially available location data. Read that sentence as a business leader, not a Pentagon analyst.

The global surveillance economy is no longer an abstraction in an academic white paper. It is happening in real time on the battlefield and in combat zones, and the data your vendors broker, sell, or aggregate is accessible to people you would never choose as employees, business partners, or customers. The partnerships that looked like growth in 2024 can now be a liability in 2026. The communications problem arrives the moment a journalist or a regulator connects your brand to that data trail, because by then, you are explaining a decision instead of having shaped how it was understood.

The defensive response is already visible: own your stack rather than rent exposure through third parties.

News broke that Kirkland & Ellis has committed $500 million over the next three to four years to develop its own proprietary artificial intelligence platform. According to Bloomberg, the investment represents one of the most ambitious technological bets ever made by a law firm. It also signals Kirkland’s strategy to control its own tech to outperform competitors in the legal industry’s competitive race to harness AI.

The move is to audit the story your data relationships tell before someone else tells it for you. Name the partnerships that would be hard to defend on a front page. Decide now what you would say about each one. The companies that get caught flat are not the ones with the worst practices. They are the ones who never rehearsed the answer.

The gap between your written AI policy and your real one is the story

VP Vance told Air Force Academy graduates the military should never let AI make life-and-death decisions. The Pentagon is moving forward with AI in war regardless. That gap between the stated policy and the operational reality is the entire communications exposure, and every company has its own version.

You probably have a written AI policy. You also have an unwritten one that is already different, because the line between "AI assists" and "AI decides" gets crossed in workflow design, not in a policy memo. Amazon scrapped an internal AI leaderboard after a senior executive told staff to stop using AI just for the sake of using it. Starbucks began factoring AI use into tech workers' bonuses. Corporate America is rationing AI as the compute bill comes due. Each of those is a company discovering that its real policy and its stated one have drifted apart in public.

Close the gap before a reporter finds it. The most defensible position is one where the policy you publish and the practice you run describe the same company. If they do not, the discrepancy is your next crisis, and you will be explaining it on someone else's timeline.

Rome just entered the AI conversation, joining Brussels in oversight

Pope Leo XIV used his first major encyclical, Magnifica Humanitas, to place moral concern rather than profit or efficiency at the center of the AI debate, comparing the technology's risks to the Tower of Babel. Anthropic helped unveil it. The Vatican is now an active voice in AI governance, alongside an EU AI-envoy role that remains unfilled, with the GCHQ chief calling AI an unstoppable force being weaponized in the gray zone between peace and war.

For any multinational, the takeaway is that the regulatory and reputational framework around AI is no longer set solely in Brussels. The moral frame is now being written in Rome, the security frame in London, and the market frame in Silicon Valley, and they do not agree. A company that tuned its AI messaging to a single regulator is now under-built for the conversation that actually exists.

Embrace the mantra 'where you sit is where you stand.' It will help you see how technology policy actually gets formed — and it is not only by those who issue fines and write laws. The audience that shapes your license to operate on AI now includes a moral authority with a billion followers. Speak to all the stakeholders who will shape and guide AI policy; it is far broader than what your compliance team has modeled.

Dynamic pricing was an operations decision. It just became a communications liability.

The New York and New Jersey attorneys general subpoenaed FIFA over World Cup ticket pricing, investigating whether staggered releases and dynamic pricing misled buyers. Strip out the soccer and the lesson is universal: the pricing mechanism that quietly migrated from airlines to concerts to sports to restaurants has finally drawn legal exposure, and the exposure is as much reputational as legal.

The failure here was never the algorithm. It was the absence of a story to go with it. Dynamic pricing optimizes revenue while generating resentment, and the companies running it have mostly decided to let the price speak for itself. That is a message, and it is the one customers heard.

If your business uses dynamic pricing, you are one investigation away from having to explain it. Decide now whether you can. The operators who survive this will be the ones who built a defensible narrative around their pricing before a subpoena required one. Silence is a position here, and it is the costly one.

Communications Win of the Week: The audience that owns the distribution

CBS suspended its takedown notices on bootleg YouTube uploads of Stephen Colbert's old public-access show, Only in Monroe, after public outcry: small story, large lesson. The instinct of a rights holder is to enforce. The smarter read was that the audience now sets the terms of distribution, and a company that fights its own fans for control of content loses the room while winning the case. CBS reversed fast enough to turn an enforcement misstep into goodwill. The win was not the content. It was the speed of the climbdown.

Communications Loss of the Week: Ferrari, defining its own launch as desecration

Ferrari unveiled Luce, its first all-electric car, with a Jony Ive design and a €550,000 price tag. The vehicle may be brilliant, but the communications were a rout. The company's own former chairman publicly called it the destruction of a legend and told Ferrari to take the prancing horse off it. When the most quotable critic of your launch is your predecessor, you have lost control of the story before the first car ships. The lesson is old and expensive: a launch is a narrative, and if you do not author it, the loudest insider will. Ferrari let the purists frame Luce as a betrayal, and now every review is litigating heritage rather than engineering.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

— Marc

Marc A. Ross | Chief Communications Strategist @ Caracal Global 

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.

The Communicating Caracal Global is a weekly memo applying the Caracal Global lens to the week's events, resolved on the communications stakes that decide how a company is understood by the audiences that matter most.

Caracal Global is a communications firm for global business, working at the intersection of geopolitics, commerce, and governments, specializing in Globalization + American Politics. Intelligence + Strategy + Communications.

Sixty-five

That's the number of active kinetic conflicts happening globally this year. The Uppsala Conflict Data Programme (UCDP) recorded 65 active state-based conflicts. Wars in which at least one belligerent is a state and that produce at least 25 battle-related deaths in a year, the highest level since its records began in 1946. The Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) spots an equally violent trend. "Despite a sharp decrease in battle-related deaths from 2022 to 2023," it observed, "the past four years have been the most violent period since the end of the Cold War."

We are now operating in the most violent international environment of the post-WWII era, and this isn't a spike. It's a structural shift. PRIO has tracked the curve for decades, and the message is consistent. We have left the relative calm of the post-Cold War period and entered something else.

Most global executives I talk to expect the world to revert to "normal" by year-end.

It won't.

The Iran war appears to be headed toward a 60-day ceasefire extension, and the Strait of Hormuz may finally reopen. Treat that as upside on fuel costs and shipping insurance. Assuming flows through the Strait gradually resume from June, global oil supply is projected to decline by 3.9 mb/d on average in 2026, to 102.2 mb/d. Per the IEA, the oil market remains in deficit until the final quarter of the year. With global oil inventories already being drawn at a record pace, further price volatility appears likely ahead of the peak summer demand period.

Three observations that civic and business leaders should be wrestling with.

1. Smaller countries can now defend themselves against bigger ones in ways they couldn't five years ago. Drones, AI targeting, cheap precision weapons, and commercial location data turned against deployed troops. The Economist spells it out: smart tech is making war a dumber choice, but it is also making it cheaper to start. Ross Douthat's NYT column connects the same theme. The mighty US military is built for the wrong century. Every defense ministry on the planet is now writing the same memo about whether half its existing force structure will be obsolete within a decade.

2. The Trump administration's foreign policy, per the new PBS Frontline documentary and the NYT's reporting, is operating on mood rather than strategy. Robert Kagan's warning in Le Monde this week is worth reading twice. The war in Iran risks permanently weakening the US position. The implicit guarantee that American power underwrites your supply chain, your dollar exposure, your dispute resolution, and your customer access in 70 countries is less reliable than it was 12 months ago. Allies are already pricing it in. Norway's nuclear coalition with France. Canada's Swedish surveillance buy. Britain and Poland's missile pact. None of those decisions would have made sense five years ago, let alone five months ago.

3. AI is now a battlefield asset, with all the governance debate that implies. JD Vance told Air Force Academy graduates this week that the military should never allow AI to make life-or-death decisions. The Pentagon is moving forward with AI in war anyway. The corporate parallel writes itself. Every company is deciding which calls to delegate to AI, and the line will land somewhere other than where the policy says it should.

Here is where this stops being geopolitics and becomes a communications problem.

Sixty-five conflicts is not background noise. It is an operating environment, and your stakeholders already know it.

Tariff volatility, supply chains rerouting around chokepoints, questions about NATO credibility, accelerating competition from China, AI corporate spending, tightening export controls, energy disruption, and interest rate uncertainty. These are not separate stories. They are the forces reshaping how your company is understood by regulators, investors, customers, and the press.

The companies that survive the next regulatory cycle are the ones that can give the same answer to the same question to a regulator, a journalist, and a customer.

That is not a legal problem or a strategy problem. It is a communications problem.

Communications shape how a decision is understood before it is made, while it is being made, and after the fact, and not explained after the damage is done.

The peace dividend is gone. A generation of executives built their careers running global businesses in a world that no longer exists. The companies that outperform the next cycle have stopped treating geopolitics as background noise and started treating it as a line item.

The ones who win the communications around those decisions are the ones who planned the communications first.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

You can always reach me @ marc@caracal.global.