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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Friday, June 12th: SpaceX IPO day. Also, #WITHpod: Bubblicious time drawing nigh?

IT market collapse coming?
  
 
Excellent discussion. An hour well-spent. Rather frightening, actually. We will not be able to claim that we were not warned. Unsustainable private debt machinations (increasingly exacerbated by corrupt federal financial policies—can you say "subprime debacle on ketamine?").
 
Are the Zombies returning?
 
RELATEDLY
NY Times
Jacob Ward is all over it 
 
In February 2026, SpaceX acquired xAI — Musk’s artificial intelligence company, maker of the Grok chatbot — in an all-stock deal. The acquisition brought xAI’s losses onto SpaceX’s consolidated books. Building, maintaining, and launching rockets is expensive. But in 2025 alone, xAI spent $12.7 billion in capital expenditures — more than the combined $8 billion SpaceX spent on its entire Starlink and rocket launch business. SpaceX posted a net loss of $4.94 billion for the year, a swing of more than $5 billion from the year before. The profitable company became the wallet for the unprofitable one. That’s what this week’s SpaceX IPO is asking the market to fund.

Before we get to whether this is a good bet, we need to be clear about what Musk is actually asking of you, his investors.

He wants your money. He does not want your opinion.

SpaceX is listing under a dual-class share structure. “Dual-class” means two tiers of stock. One class for outside investors, with standard voting rights. One class for Musk and insiders, with dramatically amplified voting power. According to SpaceX’s own S-1 filing, as reported by Reuters, Musk’s Class B super-voting shares give him 85.1% of the voting power of the entire company. You can buy a piece of SpaceX on Friday. You cannot tell SpaceX what to do. Ever…
Gonna be interesting, 'eh?

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