START FREE TRIAL

SpaceX: Is Elon Musk’s AI Empire Turning Into Wall Street’s Biggest Debt Test?

AI Summary

🔒 UNLOCK AI SUMMARY WITH FREE TRIAL

START FREE TRIAL

Twelve days after SpaceX raised $86 billion in the largest IPO in American history, Elon Musk went back to Wall Street and asked for $25 billion more.

The company had $101 billion in cash. And it borrowed $25 billion anyway.

This is not a story about SpaceX needing money. It is a story about what happens when the AI boom shifts from an equity story to a debt story. And yesterday’s crash, the worst single day for AI stocks in months, is directly connected to it.

One company in our screener fell 4% yesterday. It had never appeared in our model before. We added it to the LENS Watch List after the close. The SpaceX bond deal is the reason it belongs there.

We will get to that name. But you need to understand the bond deal first.

What Spacex Actually Did

On Tuesday, SpaceX priced $25 billion in senior unsecured bonds across five tranches. Maturities run from 2031 to 2056. Interest rates range from 5.35% to 6.65%. The offering attracted $89 billion in demand at its peak. The deal was originally targeted at $20 billion and had to be upsized.

Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Citigroup all took a seat at this table.

The proceeds have one destination: repaying a $20 billion bridge loan that SpaceX raised to pay off the junk bonds sitting on xAI’s balance sheet when SpaceX acquired it in February.

This Is The Part That Matters

Before February 2026, xAI had $17.5 billion in junk-rated bonds at 9.5% to 12.5% interest, costing around $1.8 billion a year in debt service. And xAI was losing money at scale. The company generated $3.2 billion in revenue last year but posted a $6.4 billion operating loss. Those losses doubled from 2024.

When SpaceX absorbed xAI, xAI’s junk debt became SpaceX’s investment-grade debt. Not because xAI’s business improved. Because Starlink generated $4 billion in operating profit in 2025, and government rocket contracts are the most reliable cash-flow machines in tech. That changed the credit rating. And that changed everything.

The new $25 billion bonds will cost SpaceX about $1.5 billion a year in interest. That is $300 million less than the old xAI debt. By stapling xAI’s balance sheet to Starlink’s, Musk refinanced his AI bet at investment-grade rates. He used one company’s creditworthiness to bail out another company’s debt problems. And Wall Street handed him $89 billion to do it.

SpaceX’s free cash flow was negative $14 billion in 2025, more than double the year before. The AI division is consuming Starlink’s profits faster than Starlink can generate them. The bonds maturing in 2056 are asking investors to believe this empire will still generate cash flows in 30 years.

That is a 30-year bet on a company whose AI division lost $6.4 billion in operating income last year.

The Two Markets Telling Opposite Stories

The equity market has been selling AI stocks hard. Yesterday, the KOSPI crashed 10%. Nvidia, Broadcom, AMD, and Micron all fell sharply. The narrative is that AI capex is out of control, returns are uncertain, and the bubble may be entering its debt-funded final phase.

The bond market saw $89 billion show up for $25 billion of SpaceX paper. Four times oversubscribed. On a first-time issuer. With a 30-year tranche. Bond investors lose everything if the company defaults. And they could not get enough.

One market is panicking. The other is placing long-duration bets at scale. Both cannot be right. Which one is correct will determine what happens to AI stocks for the next 12 months.

The Stock That Just Entered Our LENS Watch List

Here is what nobody has connected yet.

The bond market is telling you AI infrastructure spending is not stopping. It is accelerating, just financed differently. Every dollar of that SpaceX bond deal funds compute infrastructure that runs on chips. Specific chips. From a company with an ecosystem so entrenched that switching costs alone protect its market position.

Yesterday’s crash sent that company’s stock down 4%. Its valuation fell into territory that triggered our model for the first time in its history. It appeared in the Hidden AI Beneficiary screener on Tuesday evening. It was not in the screener last week. The price had to fall this far before the fundamentals looked compelling enough relative to the share price.

The SpaceX bond deal is the reason the thesis holds. If debt markets are funding 30-year AI infrastructure paper, the compute buildout is a multi-decade capital cycle. And the company that dominates the core of that cycle at an 80%+ market share just got cheaper.

We added it to the LENS Watch List after Tuesday’s close.

Where The LENS Index Stands

On Tuesday, the S&P 500 fell 1.44%. LENS fell 0.88%. The portfolio outperformed the market on the worst AI selloff day of the month. That is what low-beta, thesis-driven positioning is supposed to do in a correction.

MetricValueNotesLast Updated
Active Positions6 / 30Core / Base / Speculative | PODD on Watch List23-Jun-26
Cash Deployed31%Full positions visible to subscribers only23-Jun-26
Cash Reserve69%Minimum 15% cash reserve maintained at all times23-Jun-26
Performance Since Launch+4.3%LENS since May 22 | S&P: -0.9% (S&P below inception)23-Jun-26
Alpha Generated+5.2%vs S&P 500 Total Return from inception (May 22, 2026)23-Jun-26
Portfolio Beta0.66vs S&P 500 | 21 daily observations23-Jun-26
Max Drawdown-2.5%Jun 1 peak (104.81) to Jun 5 trough (102.84)23-Jun-26
Sharpe Ratio (Prelim.)2.82Annualized, 21 obs, rf=3.5%. Full Sharpe from Q4 202623-Jun-26
Inception DateMay 22, 2026DELL pre-mortem published. Warsh sworn in same day.Fixed
BenchmarkS&P 500 Total ReturnOutperform on a risk-adjusted basisFixed
StrategyNarrative DisruptionLong-only, large-cap, max 30 positionsFixed
DirectionLong OnlySubscribe to access all positions and targetsFixed

The SpaceX bond deal is not a red flag. It is a signal about where we are in the AI infrastructure cycle. The name we added to the Watch List yesterday answers which market is right. And so does its entry trigger.

The name we added to the LENS Watch List on June 23, 2026 is …

Continue Reading With Our 7-Day Free Trial

ONLY $10 per month after the trial. Cancel anytime. No sponsors. No conflicts. 100% independent stock research.

Recent Articles

AI Trade Has Its First MAJOR CRACK as KOSPI Crashes 10%!

South Korea's stock market just had its worst day...

Alphabet: The $225 Billion AI Talent Shock Wall Street Cannot Ignore

Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL) just gave Wall Street a reminder...

Micron Reports in 48 Hours. The Number Everyone Is Watching Isn’t the EPS.

Micron Technology reports earnings on Wednesday evening. The stock is...

AbbVie’s $11 Billion Eczema Gamble Is Bigger Than Skin

AbbVie Inc. (NYSE:ABBV) may be close to buying Apogee...

The FTC Is Coming For Amazon’s Sponsored Ads

Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) may have a new headache, and...

Related Articles

AI Trade Has Its First MAJOR CRACK as KOSPI Crashes 10%!

South Korea's stock market just had its worst day...

Alphabet: The $225 Billion AI Talent Shock Wall Street Cannot Ignore

Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL) just gave Wall Street a reminder...

Micron Reports in 48 Hours. The Number Everyone Is Watching Isn’t the EPS.

Micron Technology reports earnings on Wednesday evening. The stock is...

AbbVie’s $11 Billion Eczema Gamble Is Bigger Than Skin

AbbVie Inc. (NYSE:ABBV) may be close to buying Apogee...

The FTC Is Coming For Amazon’s Sponsored Ads

Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) may have a new headache, and...

Moderna’s Flu Shot Won Over FDA Advisers—But Can It Win Back America?

Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) just landed a regulatory moment that people...

Did Fox Pay $25 Billion For Roku’s Platform, Or Its Ad Data Edge?

Fox Corp (NASDAQ:FOXA) has made its biggest swing yet...

Nvidia Just Borrowed $25 Billion It DOESN’T NEED. That’s The Point!

NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) just gave Wall Street a new...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img