SpaceX IPO Ignites China’s Commercial Space Investment Frenzy
SpaceX’s $2 trillion valuation has Chinese investors scrambling for the next rocket company
On June 12, 2026, SpaceX went public at the largest valuation in IPO history. The stock opened at $176 per share, pushing the company’s market capitalization past $2 trillion and making Elon Musk the first trillionaire. But the real fireworks were happening 7,000 miles away in Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen, where Chinese venture capital firms were racing to fund domestic rocket and satellite companies.
“The SpaceX IPO is the best thing that ever happened to Chinese commercial space fundraising,” said Zhou Qiang, managing partner at Sequoia Capital China’s deep-tech practice. “Every LP wants exposure to the sector now.”
China’s commercial space boom
Over the past six months, commercial aerospace has become the hottest investment category in China’s primary market. Investors are queuing to meet founders, local governments are competing to attract rocket manufacturing facilities, and funds that previously ignored the sector are now publishing research on propulsion systems and satellite constellations.
The numbers are staggering. Chinese commercial space companies raised a combined 42 billion yuan ($5.8 billion) in the first five months of 2026 — more than the total raised in all of 2024 and 2025 combined. Key deals include:
- Landspace (蓝箭航天): 8 billion yuan Series E for Zhuque-3 methane rocket development
- Galactic Energy (星河动力): 5.5 billion yuan for Ceres-1 solid rocket scale-up
- Space Pioneer (天兵科技): 6 billion yuan for Tianlong-3 liquid rocket production
- MinoSpace (微纳星空): 3 billion yuan for low-orbit satellite constellation
The technology gap — and where China leads
Chinese rocket companies are roughly 5-7 years behind SpaceX in reusable launch technology. Falcon 9 has completed over 300 successful landings; no Chinese company has achieved an orbital-class booster recovery yet. Landspace and Space Pioneer are targeting their first recovery attempts in late 2026.
Where China leads is in cost structure. A Falcon 9 launch costs roughly $67 million (and dropping with Starship). Chinese competitors are offering launches at $30-40 million, leveraging lower labor costs and government subsidies. For price-sensitive customers in Southeast Asia, Africa, and South America, Chinese launch providers are increasingly attractive.
Government support
Beijing has designated commercial space as a “strategic emerging industry” in the 14th Five-Year Plan. Local governments in Beijing, Shanghai, Xi’an, and Wuhan are offering land, tax breaks, and direct subsidies to attract rocket companies. The Hainan Commercial Space Launch Center, China’s first dedicated commercial launch facility, began operations in late 2025.
The government’s interest isn’t purely commercial. Commercial rocket companies serve as talent pipelines and technology testbeds for China’s military-space complex. The line between civilian and military space programs is deliberately blurred.
Sources
- 36kr, “SpaceX 2万亿美元市值这一夜,回望中国商业航天十年冷暖,” June 13, 2026
- SpaceX S-1 filing and IPO pricing, June 12, 2026
- China Venture Research, commercial space funding data, January-May 2026