The current IPO cycle is dominated by a handful of private tech giants preparing to list, led by SpaceX and other high-profile names such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Stripe. Although the number of U.S. listings has dropped 19% from last year, the total capital raised has jumped by 148%, underscoring that fewer but much larger offerings are reshaping access to public markets.
These potential market debuts are being framed as once-in-a-generation events - a tranche of multi-trillion-dollar private companies moving toward public ownership and providing retail investors unprecedented access to businesses that, in many cases, center on nascent industries. Space-based AI data centers, a major component of SpaceX's pitch, are an example of an industry that does not yet exist at scale but is central to the valuation story for some of these issuers.
What the SpaceX proposal entails
SpaceX is reportedly seeking roughly $75 billion in proceeds by selling a 5% stake at a valuation above $1.75 trillion - a sum that would dwarf past record IPOs such as Saudi Aramco, Alibaba and SoftBank Corp. That size of offering, if realized, would reset how the market measures the scale of a public debut.
Understanding what investors would be buying requires separating core operations from the more speculative elements of the pitch. On the operational side, SpaceX occupies a dominant position in commercial space launch and satellite communications. It handles about 80% of domestic commercial launches and its Starlink network is estimated to own and operate around 70% of the world's active satellites.
But the headline valuation is driven primarily by the company's vision for space-based AI infrastructure. SpaceX projects a very large future addressable market for orbiting data centers - a figure the company has put at $26.5 trillion by the 2030s - arguing that placing computation in orbit can mitigate Earth's power and cooling constraints by using solar arrays and the cold of deep space for cooling.
Financials and the valuation gap
The company's most recent financial picture shows a significant divide between ambition and current results. SpaceX reported $18.7 billion in revenue last year, representing 33% growth tied in part to Starlink's expansion. At the same time, integrating an AI division has been costly: consolidated net losses reached $4.9 billion in 2025, and the most recent quarter included a $4.2 billion charge.
At the $1.75 trillion valuation cited in the offering context, investors would effectively be paying on the order of 95 times trailing sales for a business that is producing accelerating losses - a multiple that frames the central valuation debate.
Evidence from prior high-valuation debuts
History provides several examples of highly hyped market debuts that later confronted investor skepticism when profit metrics failed to match growth narratives. The article highlights several such cases:
- Uber (2019) - A dominant narrative about global logistics and ride-sharing collided with persistently high operating costs and a slow path to consistent profits, leaving the stock trading below its IPO price for years.
- Snowflake (2020) - Cloud-related enthusiasm pushed valuation to roughly 100 times revenue; when profit realization became a priority, the stock fell more than 60% from its peak.
- Robinhood (2021) - A valuation premised on rapid user growth rather than sustainable earnings saw the stock decline over 85% from its post-IPO high after the meme-stock dynamic faded.
- Rivian and Coinbase (2021) - Both companies carried high valuations tied to large projected addressable markets; when macro conditions tightened and earnings did not match projections, both experienced steep drawdowns.
The takeaway presented is that market dominance or aspirational market size can be costly to buy into if the purchase price is set at extreme multiples on day one.
Systematic evaluation and AI-driven selection
Against that backdrop, the article describes a data-driven approach intended to identify companies with more favorable risk-reward tradeoffs in public markets. The described ProPicks AI strategy - launched in November 2023 - uses investor-grade models to sift through large universes of equities and produce monthly, high-conviction lists intended to prioritize underlying value over speculative narratives.
Reported performance figures for this AI strategy are presented as follows: since its official launch in November 2023, the ProPicks AI strategy has delivered a cumulative return of +196.15%, outpacing the S&P 500 by +124.82% over the same interval. The outperformance is framed as real-world results recorded since the models' commercial debut.
Included among recent locked-in gains attributed to this strategy are several specific positions with double- and triple-digit returns, for example:
- SanDisk (SNDK): +189.1% locked-in profit
- Victoria's Secret Co (VSCO): +113.6% locked-in profit
- Fortrea Holdings (FTRE): +76.6% locked-in profit
- InnovAge Holding (INNV): +63.8% locked-in profit
- Rayonier Advanced Materials (RYAM): +60.8% locked-in profit
- Tronox (TROX): +55.9% locked-in profit
- Kulicke & Soffa (KLIC): +53.0% locked-in profit
How the AI stock picker is described to work
The selection process is described as a monthly evaluation of thousands of global equities using a blend of historical and forward-looking signals. Specifically, the engine draws on more than 15 years of financial data across over 150 quantitative models to identify up to 20 high-conviction stocks per strategy based on projected medium-term upside potential.
Strategies are rebalanced monthly: new opportunities are added, strong performers are retained, and names that no longer meet criteria are removed. To provide a consistent benchmark for performance measurement, each monthly strategy uses equal weighting across selected stocks, although investors are free to adopt different allocation schemes.
The stated goal of this process is to keep capital positioned in companies that show the strongest mix of momentum, valuation and business performance according to the models' criteria.
Tools for execution
The coverage also highlights a chart-analysis feature that combines pattern recognition with actionable trade guidance. The described Vision AI capability 'sees' charts and generates a trading plan - entry, stop-loss and profit target - in under 60 seconds, a service pitched as a way to close the so-called conviction gap between reading a chart and acting on it.
Context and caveats
The article emphasizes the concentration of early-stage gains in venture capital and private equity when companies scale to extremely large private valuations before listing. That distribution of early returns is presented as an important practical consideration for retail investors evaluating participation in mega-IPOs.
Readers are also reminded that subscription pricing mentioned in the coverage is accurate at the time of publication and may vary by region based on ongoing testing of offers.