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Billionaire Ron Baron Puts $1 Billion into SpaceX IPO. Here’s Why They Call It “The Greatest Company On The Planet” In Manufacturing.

The largest IPO in history came on June 12. SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) sold about 556 million shares at $135 each, raising about $75 billion. After the investment banks underwriting the offering exercised their “green shoe” option to buy more shares, that amount is now $85.7 billion — nearly three times the next largest raise in history.

Among those who managed to get shares on the first day was the manager of SpaceX bull and billionaire fund Ron Baron, who added $ 1 billion to his largest stake in the company.

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Baron predicted that SpaceX would become “the biggest company in the world.” This is why I think you are wrong.

Ron Baron already has a large stake in SpaceX

First, these are far from Baron’s first assignments. His fund, Baron Capital, began buying SpaceX through an employee stock sale back in 2017 and eventually invested nearly $2 billion in 27 rounds of private equity funding.

The company’s total stake is now worth more than $25 billion, making it its largest position at $65 billion under management.

Baron thinks that’s about to get bigger. He told CNBC’s executives Squawk box in May that SpaceX “will be the biggest company in the world” and that he believes “within the next 10 or 15 years, [it] it will cost $10 trillion, $20 trillion, $30 trillion, and I could be much lower.”

Why Baron thinks SpaceX will be worth $30 trillion

Baron is so powerful because he sees a hypergrowth company doing things on a scale no one else can match, saying, “What they’ve done is impossible for anyone to accomplish. It’s not going to happen.”

He believes that Starlink, the company’s satellite Internet and broadband business, will eventually reach 300 million users and generate $1 trillion a year.

In context, Starlink had about 10 million subscribers and $11.4 billion in revenue by 2025, so he is betting on a thirty-fold jump in users, expecting to pay them three times for the service what they are today.

He also sees Starship, the next-generation rocket under development, as a revolution for the launch business. In its normal configuration, Starship is designed to haul 100 to 150 tons of payload into low Earth orbit compared to 17.5 metric tons on the Falcon 9, the company’s current workhorse.

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