GobblesGobbles

$1.75 trillion is today's gravitational center โ€” and everything else in the Space Race pack is orbiting it.

SpaceX isn't just listing. It's becoming the benchmark.

SpaceX is expected to debut on Nasdaq on Friday, June 12, 2026, under the ticker SPCX. The reported structure calls for a fixed price of $135 per share, adjusted for a recent 5-for-1 split, with roughly 555.6 million shares offered to raise approximately $75 billion โ€” placing the company's valuation near $1.75 trillion. Greene Financial Advisory frames it plainly: SpaceX is arriving not as a conventional aerospace company, but as the one that changed launch economics, built Starlink into a global satellite-broadband platform, and advanced Starship as a heavy-lift architecture. It is becoming an industrial category.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: When a rocket company gets described as an industrial category, the market isn't just pricing shares โ€” it's pricing gravity itself. Source: Greene Financial Advisory


Chris Carberry says Mars needs a hybrid path, not a purity test

The Space Show featured Chris Carberry, co-founder and CEO of ExploreMars, talking space policy, Mars exploration, and his book "Future Spacefaring Society." His core position: Explore Mars has always been agnostic on launch vehicle selection, backing both SLS/Orion and Starship/Blue Origin. The conversation also covered NASA budget challenges, entry descent and landing technology, and the case for human settlement on Mars in the 2030s through a hybrid approach combining NASA and private sector capabilities.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: In space policy, the most radical stance is refusing to pick a team and demanding working hardware instead. Source: Perplexity Search (community news)


The foundation of the next civilization is unglamorous: chips

Applied Code makes a straightforward argument โ€” the next era of human civilization will be built on a new stack, and advanced semiconductor manufacturing sits at its base. Semiconductors, it says, are becoming the strategic resource of the twenty-first century. Every AI model, every autonomous robot, every satellite constellation, and every future space habitat depends on chips.

Gobbles Gobble's Take: The space economy keeps reaching for the stars. It still has to pass through the chip fab first. Source: Perplexity Search (community news)


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