By Don Terry & Ben Emos | Saturday June 13 2026 | 5 min read
The SpaceX IPO has launched, and the reaction hasn’t just been loud — it’s been explosive. What should have been a historic milestone for the world’s most powerful private space company has instead triggered some of the harshest criticism Elon Musk has ever faced. Economist Robert Reich didn’t simply critique the offering; he blew it apart. He called the IPO “the universe’s largest Ponzi scheme,” a line that spread instantly because the numbers behind the valuation practically beg for disbelief. Critics even drew comparisons to Bernie Madoff — not literally, but loudly — because the scale of the valuation feels, to them, like financial fantasy dressed up as innovation.
Reich’s argument is simple: SpaceX is selling dreams, not fundamentals. Mars colonies, interstellar travel, a multiplanetary future — these are visions, not revenue streams. He said the IPO is “nothing more than a show of faith in Musk,” and that faith comes with a catch big enough to swallow the entire market. Musk’s Class‑B shares carry ten times the voting power of the public shares. Investors can pour billions into the company, but they won’t have a real say. They’re passengers strapped into Musk’s rocket, not copilots.
Paul Krugman hit the IPO just as hard. The Nobel Prize–winning economist said the valuation that turned Musk into the world’s first trillionaire “stinks to high heaven.” His point was brutal: remove Musk from the picture and the whole thing collapses. “Imagine Musk disappears into a monastery,” he said. “What’s left? A medium‑sized satellite launch company.” Not a trillion‑dollar empire — just a solid business inflated into a cosmic myth.
Krugman didn’t stop there. He called Grok — Musk’s AI model — “terrible,” and described the platform it’s attached to, the remains of Twitter, as “a right‑wing, Nazi‑infested wasteland.” In his view, the valuation isn’t based on performance or innovation. It’s based on Musk’s cult of personality.
LIVE: Elon Musk’s SpaceX rings Nasdaq opening bell as company goes public
Then came the hammer: “This is a Ponzi scheme.” And Krugman argued it’s worse than the classic version. With Madoff, people had to willingly hand over their money. With SpaceX, millions of Americans are being pulled in automatically. Index funds have already absorbed SpaceX stock, meaning anyone with a retirement account tied to major indexes is now exposed whether they believe in Musk’s vision or not. “People are being forced to buy into SpaceX because the indexes are including it, even though by the normal rules they should not,” Krugman said.
He also warned that major institutions are now entangled in the hype. “There are universities that have 10 or 15 percent of their endowment invested in SpaceX,” he said — exposure he called reckless, especially when the valuation depends more on Musk’s charisma than transparent accounting.
Reich echoed the same alarm. He warned that a “big chunk of Americans’ retirement savings and pensions” will be tied to SpaceX whether they want it or not. The IPO didn’t just open the door to public investment — it swept the public inside.
Reich also compared the IPO to Musk’s chaotic promotion of DOGE and said it resembles “Trump’s takeover of the U.S. government,” arguing that both rely on the will of a man with “a giant ego and an insatiable thirst for money and power.” These are the critics’ words, not mine, but the intensity shows how deeply the IPO has rattled people.
Senator Elizabeth Warren called for delaying the offering, warning of “misleading” or “inaccurate” accounting behind the valuation. When a sitting senator publicly questions whether the numbers are real, it’s not a small warning — it’s a flare.
The political angle only intensifies the scrutiny. According to public financial disclosures, ten federal officials reported holdings in SpaceX or xAI worth between $9.9 million and $43.8 million. They could have sold without further disclosure, leaving the public in the dark about who still stands to benefit. Meanwhile, SpaceX has received billions in government contracts — $4 billion in fiscal 2025 and another $6.5 billion from the U.S. Space Force.
Now that the IPO has launched, the stakes are real. If the valuation holds, Musk becomes the world’s first trillionaire. Insiders become billionaires. Employees become millionaires. And millions of ordinary Americans become investors in a company they cannot control, whose valuation is built on promises that may never materialize.
Critics say the whole thing looks like a high‑stakes confidence game wrapped in the language of innovation — a financial rocket ride powered not by engines, but by hype. And now that it’s launched, there’s no turning back.
Why Critics Believe Trump and Six Justices Are Suddenly Afraid of the Midterm Fallout
The Danger of Making Elon Musk a Trillionaire: Power, Volatility, and Unchecked Influence
Brutal Court Dismissal Opens the Floodgates on Trump DOJ’s Vindictive Prosecutions
The Role of Philip Alito in the $1.776 Billion Fund: Questions of Ethics, Recusal, and Public Trust
Trump May Have Accidentally Undermined His Own Immunity Defense as Court Battle Intensifies


