Markets & Finance
SpaceX’s Record-Breaking IPO Makes Elon Musk the World’s First Trillionaire
SpaceX’s blockbuster stock market debut earlier this month has continued to reverberate through global markets, cementing Elon Musk’s status as the world’s first trillionaire and reshaping the landscape of the world’s most valuable public companies.
A Historic Debut
SpaceX shares, trading under the ticker “SPCX” on the Nasdaq, opened at $150 — above their $135 IPO price — and surged as high as $176.52 before closing the first day up roughly 19% at $160.95, according to CNN Business. The offering raised approximately $75 billion, making it the largest IPO in history, NPR reported, and valued the rocket and satellite company at more than $2 trillion in early trading.
CNBC reported that shares continued climbing in after-hours trading, pushing the company’s market capitalization to roughly $2.2 trillion and briefly making SpaceX the sixth-largest publicly traded company in the United States, ahead of Musk’s other company, Tesla.
Musk’s Stake and Control
Musk’s roughly 40% ownership stake in SpaceX has been valued at around $800 billion in the wake of the listing, NPR reported, a figure that — combined with his Tesla holdings and other assets — pushed his total net worth past the trillion-dollar threshold for the first time for any individual. Notably, Musk retains more than 80% of SpaceX’s voting power, according to NPR, meaning public shareholders will have limited influence over how the company is run despite the broad-based retail demand for shares.
Why Investors Bought In
According to CNBC, Musk said on a livestream ahead of the offering that SpaceX has been cash-flow positive since around 2015 and that the IPO was intended to fund a major growth phase, including plans to deploy over 100,000 satellites and build AI data centers in space. The company’s only currently profitable division is its Starlink satellite internet business, which CNBC noted generated the majority of SpaceX’s $18.67 billion in revenue last year.
Despite the bullish reception, NPR reported that SpaceX’s financial filings show the company lost roughly $5 billion last year and another $4 billion in the first quarter of 2026, with much of that loss tied to the AI division absorbed from Musk’s former company, xAI, which SpaceX acquired in early 2026.
A Hidden Winner: Alphabet
Among the lesser-discussed beneficiaries of the listing is Alphabet, which CNBC reported owns roughly 4.9% of SpaceX — a stake now worth an estimated $105 billion, making it one of Google’s most lucrative private investments ever.
What Comes Next
CNN Business noted that SpaceX’s amended IPO filing flagged the possibility of issuing “significant equity” to fund future transactions, fueling market speculation about a potential future tie-up with Tesla, in which SpaceX already holds a stake stemming from Tesla’s earlier $2 billion investment in xAI.
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Analysis
Michael Burry Says He’s Tempted to Short SpaceX — But He’s Passing, For Now
Michael Burry, the investor who rose to fame for correctly predicting the 2008 housing market collapse, has revealed he considered betting against Elon Musk’s SpaceX — but ultimately decided against it. The admission, surfacing just as SpaceX moves toward a long-anticipated public listing, has quickly become one of the most talked-about lines in markets this week.
Why Burry’s Words Carry Weight
Few investors generate headlines the way Burry does. His reputation as a contrarian who isn’t afraid to bet against popular narratives means that even a passing comment about being “tempted” to short a company is enough to move conversation across trading desks and social media alike. The fact that he chose not to follow through only adds intrigue, leaving observers to speculate about what gave him pause.
The SpaceX Backdrop
The comments land at a notable moment for SpaceX, which has been the subject of growing market attention as talk of an eventual IPO continues to build. SpaceX has become one of the most closely watched private companies in the world, with a valuation that has climbed steadily on the back of its dominance in commercial launch services and its expanding satellite internet business.
A short bet against a company of SpaceX’s scale and momentum would be a high-risk, high-conviction move — exactly the kind of trade Burry has built his reputation on, which is part of why his decision to pass is drawing as much attention as the idea itself would have.
Reading Between the Lines
Without elaborating on his specific reasoning, Burry’s comment leaves room for interpretation. It could reflect genuine respect for SpaceX’s fundamentals and growth trajectory, or simply an acknowledgment that shorting a company with no current public listing — and significant insider control — is a structurally difficult trade to execute profitably.
The Takeaway
Whether or not Burry ever acts on the instinct, the episode is a reminder of how much weight markets still place on the views of investors with a track record of contrarian calls — even when, as in this case, the headline is really about a bet that didn’t happen.
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Analysis
Japan’s Property Sector Looks Strong. So Why Are Investors Going Abroad?
Tokyo’s skyline tells one story. A newly built detached house in the capital’s 23 wards now averages ¥86.67 million, a figure that would have seemed implausible a decade ago, while land prices have risen for a seventh consecutive period across Japan’s major cities. By every conventional measure, the Japan property market is not just stable — it’s on a tear. Yet a parallel story is unfolding in the wire rooms of Tokyo’s trading houses: Japanese capital is leaving, and it’s heading straight for American real estate.
The contradiction is the story. Domestic land values are climbing, foreign buyers are racing in to exploit a cheap yen, and inbound tourism has pushed hotel assets to the top of every institutional shopping list. Still, Japanese pension funds, insurers, and high-net-worth investors are quietly building positions overseas. The explanation isn’t sentiment. It’s yield, leverage economics, and a stubborn gap between what Japan’s market offers and what investors believe they can get elsewhere.
The Domestic Boom Is Real — But It’s Not Built for Everyone
Start with the headline numbers, because they are not in dispute. The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism’s Q3 2025 Land Price LOOK Report confirmed that residential and commercial land values rose across all major cities for a seventh straight reporting period, with condominium demand in well-located districts keeping prices firm. A CBRE survey cited by Reuters found Asia-Pacific net buying intentions for 2026 reaching 17%, up from 13% a year earlier, while Tokyo retained its position as the top city globally for cross-border real estate investment for a seventh consecutive year.
That inbound enthusiasm has a simple driver: currency. With the yen trading near multi-decade lows, a ¥5,000,000 property now costs roughly $33,000 — about half what it would have cost in 2020, and search interest from the UK, Canada, and the US has surged 38–62% year-on-year. Foreign investors now account for around 27% of total real estate transactions nationwide, and overseas buyers represent up to 40% of new apartment sales in Tokyo’s prime central wards.
But a discount that benefits dollar- and pound-denominated buyers works in reverse for yen-denominated ones. A few structural realities sit underneath the boom:
- Sector divergence is widening. The Commercial Real Estate Price Index for Q3 2025 showed office assets in Japan’s three major metros falling 9.5%, even as logistics warehouses rose 11.6% and factory assets gained 3.9% — a market rewarding only specific, well-chosen bets.
- Yields remain thin by global standards. Decades of near-zero interest rates compressed domestic property returns, and many institutional investors now look abroad simply because yields at home can’t compete.
- Regional disparity is growing. Suburban and rural markets continue to lag sharply behind central Tokyo, Osaka, and a handful of regional standouts like Fukuoka.
The market isn’t weak. It’s narrow. And narrow markets push capital — especially institutional capital with return targets to hit — toward broader hunting grounds.
Why the Math Still Favors Going Abroad
What is the yen carry trade and why does it matter for Japanese property investors?
The yen carry trade involves borrowing in low-yield yen to fund purchases of higher-yielding foreign assets. Even after the Bank of Japan’s December 2025 hike to 0.75%, the gap against the US federal funds rate of 3.50%–3.75% remains roughly 300 basis points — wide enough to keep the trade profitable and outbound capital flowing.
That single number explains more about outbound Japanese investment than any survey of investor sentiment. The Bank of Japan raised its benchmark rate to 0.75% in December 2025, the highest level in three decades, after inflation exceeded its 2% target for 44 consecutive months. It was a historic move, marking the formal end of Japan’s deflationary era. Yet even at that elevated level, the math hasn’t flipped. The Federal Reserve’s target rate sits at 3.50%–3.75%, and borrowing yen to buy dollar assets still nets roughly a 3% annual spread before any currency movement — a structure pension funds and insurers have leaned on for decades.
That’s exactly the logic driving Japanese capital into US property specifically. America Mortgages, which tracks cross-border lending to Japanese buyers, notes that Japan’s persistently low domestic rates limit investment yields at home, pushing many investors toward US rental property for stronger returns. A Tokyo office tower yielding 3% looks far less attractive than a Sun Belt multifamily asset yielding 5–6%, even after accounting for currency hedging costs and unfamiliar regulatory terrain.
There’s a second, less obvious factor: scale. Japan’s institutional investors — its pension funds, life insurers, and trading-house property arms — manage enormous pools of capital relative to the size of the domestic commercial market. When prime Tokyo assets get bid up by both foreign and domestic buyers chasing the same scarce inventory, allocators with hundreds of billions of yen to deploy simply run out of room. Overseas markets, particularly the deep and liquid US commercial sector, offer the volume that Japan’s market — for all its strength — cannot.
What Happens If the Carry Trade Unwinds
The implications extend well beyond Tokyo trading desks. A genuine narrowing of the rate differential — a faster-than-expected BOJ tightening cycle, or a sharp US rate cut — would change the calculus quickly. Analysts at Euronews have already flagged the risk directly: rising Japanese yields threaten to unwind the carry trade that has financed decades of outbound investment, a process that could trigger forced selling of overseas assets and a stronger yen.
For US commercial real estate, that’s not a trivial risk. Japanese capital has been a meaningful, steady source of demand for hotels, logistics, and multifamily assets over the past several years. A reversal — even a partial one — would remove a buyer that has helped underpin pricing in several American secondary markets. For Japanese pension beneficiaries, the stakes are different but just as real: a sudden repatriation forced by currency moves rather than investment logic tends to crystallize losses rather than lock in gains.
Other analysts argue the alarm is overstated. Even after the December hike, Japanese rates sit at just 0.75% against 3.75% in the US — a gap still wide enough to favor dollar assets and discourage a disorderly unwind. The more likely scenario, on this reading, is a gradual rebalancing rather than a sudden stop: outbound flows slow as the differential narrows, but they don’t reverse outright unless US rates fall faster than Japanese rates rise.
Three things to watch, in order of how directly they affect the trade:
- The pace of BOJ tightening — gradual hikes are manageable; a surprise acceleration is not.
- Yen strength — a rapid appreciation can erase the interest-rate advantage in weeks rather than years.
- US rate policy — Fed cuts would compress the spread from the other direction, with the same net effect.
The Counterargument: Maybe This Is Just Diversification
Not every analyst frames this as investors fleeing a flawed domestic market. A more measured view treats outbound investment as portfolio diversification that any mature institutional investor would pursue regardless of how strong the home market looks. Japan’s GPIF and major life insurers have run globally diversified portfolios for years, well before the current property boom or the current rate cycle — overseas real estate allocation is structural, not reactive.
Under this reading, the inbound and outbound flows aren’t contradictory at all. Foreign capital buys into Japan for currency-driven discounts and political stability; Japanese capital buys into America for yield and diversification. Both trades are rational simultaneously, and neither implies the other market is somehow deficient. Advisor Perspectives has made a related point about the broader rate normalization story, arguing that the rise in Japanese yields likely reflects healthy economic normalization after decades of stagnation rather than a crisis signal — which would mean the carry trade fades gradually as Japan’s economy matures, not because anything in Japan went wrong.
That said, diversification doesn’t fully explain the timing. Outbound flows have accelerated precisely as domestic office yields compressed and sector divergence widened — which suggests yield-chasing is doing at least as much work as portfolio theory.
A Market Strong Enough to Export Capital
Japan’s property market isn’t sending a contradictory signal so much as a layered one. The country can simultaneously host record foreign buying — driven by a weak yen and political stability that few markets can match — while its own institutions look elsewhere for the yields a maturing, increasingly selective domestic market can no longer guarantee everywhere. Strength and outflow aren’t opposites here. They’re two sides of the same rate differential, and that differential, not sentiment about Japan itself, is what will determine which way the capital moves next.
The real test arrives the moment the gap narrows.
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Analysis
17 Fusion Startups Have Now Raised Over $100M Each — and the Total Keeps Climbing
The number landed on a Thursday in June, the way these numbers tend to. Seventeen private fusion companies have each now raised more than $100 million in cumulative funding, according to a tally that put total sector investment north of $13 billion. Two of the freshest entries — Helion Energy’s $465 million raise and Focused Energy’s $240 million Series A — closed within days of each other this month, and neither company has produced a single watt of commercial electricity. A TechCrunch tally published Thursday found 17 fusion startups have raised more than $100 million each, with total private investment now exceeding $13 billion, including Helion’s $465 million raise and Focused Energy’s $240 million Series A that both closed in June. One News Page
That’s the story in miniature: capital is compounding faster than physics is resolving. The gap between the two is where this piece lives.
The Money Behind the Myth
Fusion has spent seventy years as the energy source that’s permanently a decade away. What’s changed isn’t the science — it’s the balance sheet. A Fusion for Energy report found cumulative global funding in private fusion companies rose from roughly €9.9 billion to €13 billion — about $11.6 billion to $15.17 billion — between June and September 2025 alone, a pace the report’s authors called unprecedented. Funding for the sector in September 2025 was more than eight times what it had been in 2020. ANSANS
The Fusion Industry Association (FIA), the trade body that has tracked the sector since 2021, puts a finer point on who’s writing the checks. The FIA’s Global Fusion Industry Report found the sector raised $2.64 billion in private and public funding in the twelve months to July 2025 — the second-highest annual figure on record, behind only 2022. Fifty-three companies responded to that year’s survey, up from just 23 in 2021, with eight new entrants joining in a single year. FusionindustryassociationFusionindustryassociation
Three numbers worth holding onto:
- $8.05 billion — total private fusion investment in the United States across 42 companies, roughly 53% of all global funding ANS
- $5.14 billion — China’s total across eight companies, about 34% of the global pool ANS
- 77 — the number of companies the F4E Fusion Observatory now counts in the “fusion private ecosystem” worldwide ANS
The club isn’t static; it’s a leaderboard that reshuffles every quarter. Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS), the MIT spinout led by CEO Bob Mumgaard, occupies the top tier after its Series B2 followed a $1.8 billion Series B that had already put it in pole position. The company, working with MIT on high-temperature superconducting magnet design, is building SPARC, its tokamak demonstration reactor in Massachusetts, which it expects to reach operational status in late 2026 or early 2027.
Helion Energy, backed by Sam Altman, just pushed its own total higher with a $465 million raise this month. Helion’s pitch has always been the boldest on the table: a 2028 commercial electricity delivery date, with Microsoft as its first customer via a signed power purchase agreement. Helion’s latest raise, confirmed by BusinessWire, valued the company at $15.5 billion — a figure that makes it the most richly valued private fusion company on the planet, despite having generated no commercial power. The Next Web
Then there’s Pacific Fusion, which barely had time to leave stealth mode before raising a $900 million Series A — one of the largest first institutional rounds in energy history, fusion or otherwise. TAE Technologies, the oldest company in the sector, took a different exit entirely: TAE has raised $1.79 billion in total, according to PitchBook, and in late 2025 it agreed to merge with Trump Media & Technology Group in an all-stock deal valuing the combined entity at $6 billion. TechCrunch
Europe has its own contenders. In the UK, Tokamak Energy has raised $336 million and First Light Fusion has raised $108 million, reflecting what amounts to a continental bet on energy independence layered on top of climate policy. Princeton spinout Thea Energy, for its part, just closed an oversubscribed $100 million Series B in May, led by U.S. Innovative Technology Fund — a sum that places it among the better-funded fusion startups and improves its odds of reaching a commercial reactor. The capital will fund expanded manufacturing of Thea’s smaller magnets and construction of Eos, its “power plant relevant” demonstration device, starting next year. The Next Web + 2
What is fueling the surge in private fusion investment?
Power demand from AI data centers is the single largest driver of new fusion capital, alongside government tax credits and corporate power-purchase agreements. Tech firms like Microsoft and Google are signing pre-commercial electricity deals with fusion startups years before any reactor produces grid power, treating the contracts as both supply insurance and a signal to other investors.
That’s the through-line connecting Altman’s Helion bet, Microsoft’s offtake agreement, and Google’s earlier investment in TAE. Big Tech isn’t funding fusion out of philanthropy — it’s hedging against a power crunch that traditional grid buildout can’t solve fast enough. The fusion sector’s momentum is being driven primarily by Big Tech’s massive power demands for AI and data centers, and that demand has pulled forward capital that might otherwise have waited for clearer scientific proof points. financialcontent
Government money is layered underneath the private capital, not replacing it. A US Department of Energy program previously committed $46 million to eight startups — including CFS, Focused Energy, Thea Energy, Realta Fusion, Tokamak Energy, Type One Energy Group, Xcimer Energy, and Zap Energy — which collectively went on to raise $350 million in private funding. That ratio, roughly $1 of public seed money pulling in $7.6 of private capital, is the model the FIA is now lobbying Congress to scale. The Fusion Industry Association has asked the federal government for $10 billion in new funding, even as more than $9 billion in private investment has already flowed into the sector — a request that has drawn some skepticism on Capitol Hill about why a capital-flush sector needs more public backing. financialcontentNeutron Bytes
The most consequential downstream effect isn’t technological — it’s structural. Fusion is shifting from a research curiosity funded by patient government grants into an asset class with its own capital stack, supplier base, and exit pathways. After crossing the $15 billion cumulative investment milestone in late 2025, the fusion industry entered 2026 with a fundamentally different capital structure — no longer a collection of isolated lab experiments, but a full industrial stack. Cleanenergy-platform
That stack now has its own labor market. Direct employment in the private fusion sector is estimated to have surpassed 5,000 people by 2026, supporting more than 10,000 additional jobs in the secondary supply chain — magnet winders, vacuum-vessel fabricators, power-electronics specialists. Fusion companies directly employed 4,607 people as of the FIA’s mid-2025 count, more than quadruple the figure from 2021. Cleanenergy-platformFusionindustryassociation
Public markets are next. Following TAE’s lead, up to five fusion companies may go public in 2026 using SPACs and other vehicles to raise the capital required for high-cost talent and development. That’s a notable bet given that SPAC-funded energy ventures in adjacent sectors — small modular nuclear reactor company NuScale among them — have had mixed results and faced short-seller pressure once public markets started pricing in execution risk rather than narrative. Neutron Bytes
For policymakers, the long-term arithmetic is staggering if even partially realized. Analysts project the fusion energy sector could reach $40–80 billion in value by 2036 and potentially exceed $350 billion by 2050 if technological milestones are met. For now, though, that’s a forecast resting on reactors that haven’t been built yet. financialcontent
Not everyone reads $13 billion as validation. The hardest fact in fusion remains unchanged by any funding round: no private fusion company has demonstrated net energy gain at commercial scale, and the fundamental scientific challenge remains unsolved. Even the most-cited breakthrough to date carries an asterisk. The US National Ignition Facility achieved scientific breakeven in December 2022, but that measurement compared the energy delivered by lasers against the fuel to the energy released by the reaction — not the roughly 100 times greater total energy consumed by the facility. The Next WebThe Next Web
Timelines keep slipping, too, and the industry’s own boosters concede the point obliquely. CFS has said it expects SPARC to achieve a burning plasma in late 2026 or early 2027 — a meaningful scientific milestone, but still far from a commercial power plant — and its planned commercial reactor, ARC, isn’t expected to deliver electricity until the early 2030s at the earliest. General Fusion’s recent history is the cautionary tale skeptics point to directly: the Vancouver-area company ran short of cash while building its LM26 device and laid off a quarter of its staff within days of hitting a technical milestone — proof that even genuine progress doesn’t guarantee runway. The Next Web
Supply-chain confidence lags capital, too. 81% of suppliers serving the fusion sector still cite “lack of certainty” as a barrier to scaling, which is why long-term offtake deals — like Eni’s $1 billion power purchase agreement with CFS — matter as much as the funding rounds themselves. Money alone hasn’t bent the physics yet. Cleanenergy-platformCleanenergy-platform
The Tension That Won’t Resolve
Seventeen companies past $100 million isn’t proof fusion works. It’s proof that a critical mass of investors — sovereign-adjacent tech billionaires, oil majors, and now public-market vehicles — have decided the payoff is worth the wait, even without a working commercial reactor anywhere on Earth. That’s a bet on physics catching up to capital, not evidence that it already has.
The reactors are still years from the grid. The money got there first.
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