According to Elon Musk, anyone who invests in SpaceX before the company goes public will have a chance to make 1,000 times their money. That turns $500 into half a million dollars.

I know that sounds crazy. But one former tech executive who picked Bitcoin at $240, Nvidia in 2016, and Tesla early believes he's right.
Jeff Brown, a former senior executive at Qualcomm, NXP Semiconductors, and Juniper Networks, says the single best place for an investor's next dollar is the company most people still think of as a rocket builder. And his reasoning goes far beyond rockets.
The Reason This Isn't a Rocket Company Anymore
SpaceX has undergone a transformation that most mainstream financial outlets have barely covered.
In February 2026, SpaceX merged with xAI, Elon Musk's artificial intelligence company. Combined valuation: $1.25 trillion.
Weeks later, it filed a proposal with the FCC for one million orbital AI satellites. Each one designed to function as a data center powered entirely by solar energy.
Traditional AI data centers consume enormous amounts of electricity and require expensive cooling. An orbital network would face none of those constraints. Unlimited solar power. Passive cooling in the vacuum of space. No terrestrial limitations on capacity.
This isn't a rocket company anymore. It's a company building the infrastructure layer for artificial intelligence, from orbit.
No Company Has Ever Gone Public With Numbers Like These
The numbers paint a picture of market dominance rarely seen in modern industry.
SpaceX completed 134 orbital launches last year. More than every other nation on Earth combined.
It controls 84% of all satellite mass delivered to orbit. Starlink already serves 10 million subscribers across 150 countries, with revenue growing from $1.4 billion to over $6.6 billion in two years.

No event on earth creates more overnight wealth than a major tech IPO.
Early investors in Facebook turned $1,000 into more than $1 million on IPO day. The same $1,000 became $1.6 million with Uber. Over $2.3 million with Google.
The problem? All of those opportunities were off-limits to everyday investors. Wall Street and Silicon Valley insiders pocketed the gains and left everyone else with table scraps.
That's changed.
Jeff Brown has published a free presentation showing how everyday Americans can position themselves before the SpaceX IPO, starting with as little as $500.
Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America are already underwriting. Bloomberg says the S-1 filing could come any day.




