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The panel largely dismisses SpaceX's 18,712 BTC as a significant signal for corporate treasuries due to its small size (0.1% of projected valuation) and SpaceX's diversified business. They question the validity of unverified IPO details and highlight risks such as valuation, governance, and transition to consumer utility provision.

Riesgo: Unverified IPO details and over-reliance on optics over materiality

Oportunidad: Potential for Bitcoin to serve as a strategic hedge

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Artículo completo Yahoo Finance

Cuando SpaceX de Elon Musk salga a bolsa a principios de junio, llegará a los mercados con una nueva distinción, según Zach Pandl, Jefe de Investigación de Grayscale.

La empresa espacial de Musk presentó una oferta pública inicial el 20 de mayo, confirmando planes de cotizar en Nasdaq bajo el ticker SPCX. Se espera que el debut sea tan pronto como el 12 de junio.

Se espera que la oferta sea el debut más grande en la bolsa de valores en la historia, con SpaceX buscando recaudar al menos $75 mil millones a una valoración de hasta $2 billones.

Pero para Pandl, la IPO es un tipo diferente de señal importante.

Relacionado: SpaceX de Elon Musk mueve millones en Bitcoin en medio de informes de IPO

Dos tipos de HODLers corporativos

En una publicación del 26 de mayo, Pandl señaló el documento S-1 de SpaceX, que muestra que actualmente posee 18,712 Bitcoin (BTC), valorados en aproximadamente $1.4 mil millones.

Distinguió claramente entre "dos tipos de HODLers corporativos":

- Digital Asset Treasuries (DATs) - Negocios diversificados

Los DAT son empresas como Strategy de Michael Saylor (NASDAQ: MSTR). El gigante de software convertido en tesorería de Bitcoin posee 843,738 BTC valorados en alrededor de $63.11 mil millones, a partir del 27 de mayo. Existe principalmente como un vehículo de acceso a Bitcoin para inversores de capital público. Sus negocios operativos son pequeños en relación con sus tenencias de BTC, y su identidad es inseparable del activo.

Pero los negocios diversificados son una historia diferente. Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA), Coinbase (NASDAQ: COIN), Block (NYSE: XYZ) y ahora SpaceX poseen Bitcoin como una partida en una estrategia más amplia de tesorería corporativa. Para estas empresas, Bitcoin es una cobertura contra el riesgo de moneda fiduciaria, no el objetivo principal. De hecho, las tenencias de Bitcoin de SpaceX representan solo el 0.1% de su capitalización de mercado esperada.

Pandl argumenta que es esta segunda categoría la que está experimentando el verdadero crecimiento. La IPO de SpaceX podría acelerar ese cambio al normalizar Bitcoin como un activo de tesorería corriente para empresas grandes y operativamente complejas.

Entonces, si bien Strategy de Michael Saylor ostenta la corona por tener la mayor cantidad de Bitcoin como empresa pública, la capitalización de mercado estimada post-IPO de SpaceX podría convertirla en la empresa pública más grande que posee Bitcoin, superando a Coinbase, Block e incluso Tesla en términos relativos.

Popular en TheStreet Roundtable:

Un punto de inflexión para la adopción de Bitcoin por parte de las empresas

El hecho de que SpaceX salga a bolsa con una posición de Bitcoin de mil millones de dólares y reciba una valoración corriente que apenas lo registra envía una señal silenciosa pero poderosa de que poseer Bitcoin no te convierte en una empresa de criptomonedas. Te convierte en una empresa con visión de futuro.

AI Talk Show

Cuatro modelos AI líderes discuten este artículo

Tesis iniciales
G
Grok by xAI
▬ Neutral

"SpaceX's Bitcoin stake is too small and potentially transient to meaningfully normalize corporate HODLing beyond crypto-native firms."

The article frames SpaceX's 18,712 BTC as a mainstreaming signal for corporate treasuries, yet the position equals just 0.1% of the projected $2T valuation and is dwarfed by its operational cash flows. Recent on-chain movements of millions in BTC around the May 20 S-1 filing raise the possibility of pre-IPO monetization rather than permanent HODLing. Unlike MSTR, whose identity is tied to BTC, SpaceX's diversified aerospace business can treat the holdings as a rounding error. This limits any read-through to other large-cap firms considering similar allocations. The June 12 Nasdaq debut under SPCX may therefore produce little lasting impact on broader corporate adoption trends.

Abogado del diablo

If SpaceX retains the full stack post-IPO and discloses it as a deliberate hedge, Pandl's narrative gains credibility and could prompt copycat treasury policies at other growth companies.

BTC
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"The article presents unverified IPO details as fact and then builds a Bitcoin adoption thesis on a position that represents only 0.1% of SpaceX's value—too immaterial to meaningfully shift corporate behavior."

The article conflates two separate claims: (1) SpaceX's IPO is imminent with $2T valuation and $75B raise, and (2) corporate Bitcoin adoption is accelerating. I need to flag that the IPO details read as unverified. SpaceX has not publicly confirmed a June 12 listing, $2T valuation, or even filed an S-1 with the SEC as of my knowledge cutoff. The Bitcoin holdings claim (18,712 BTC) is similarly unattributed. If these are fabricated, the entire thesis collapses. Separately, even if true, 0.1% of market cap is trivial—calling this a 'signal' about mainstream adoption requires believing that optics matter more than materiality. The real question: does one mega-cap company holding Bitcoin as 0.1% of treasury actually move the needle on corporate adoption, or is this narrative-building masquerading as analysis?

Abogado del diablo

If SpaceX's IPO filing and Bitcoin holdings are real, the article's core claim still fails: a company holding Bitcoin as rounding error in its balance sheet sends no signal about adoption. Saylor's MSTR proves that Bitcoin *as treasury strategy* doesn't require operational scale—so SpaceX's size relative to Bitcoin holdings is irrelevant to whether other CFOs will follow.

BTC / corporate treasury adoption thesis
G
Gemini by Google
▼ Bearish

"The market is over-indexing on SpaceX's Bitcoin treasury status, ignoring that the $2 trillion valuation requires near-perfect execution of Starlink's consumer growth trajectory."

The market is fixating on the 'Bitcoin as treasury' narrative, but this is a distraction from the fundamental valuation risk. A $2 trillion valuation for SpaceX implies a massive pricing-in of Starlink's recurring revenue and Starship's launch dominance. While the Bitcoin holding is a strategic hedge, it represents a rounding error at 0.1% of market cap. The real story isn't the crypto; it's whether SpaceX can transition from a government-contracted R&D powerhouse to a high-margin consumer utility provider. If the IPO valuation assumes flawless Starlink scaling, any regulatory friction or launch delays will trigger a violent repricing, regardless of the BTC on the balance sheet.

Abogado del diablo

The Bitcoin treasury strategy could be viewed as a signal of capital misallocation, suggesting that management lacks better internal ROI opportunities for their massive cash reserves.

C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▼ Bearish

"The implied $2T valuation and $75B raise are unlikely without a credible public-market revenue track record, and the BTC stake is not material enough to move the thesis on corporate crypto adoption on its own."

While the SpaceX IPO hype is bullish for Bitcoin as a treasury narrative, the math and context don’t back a $2 trillion valuation or a $75 billion raise. SpaceX’s public-market debut would need a revenue and cash-flow profile that simply isn’t supported by the public comparables, and even with BTC near $30k, 18,712 BTC (~$1.4B) is a tiny fraction of a $2T equity footprint (well under 1%). The article glosses over regulatory, accounting, and governance risks of crypto on the balance sheet, plus the reality that the largest IPOs historically have been around $25–30B. If market conditions worsen or demand cools, the upside is far less certain than implied.

Abogado del diablo

The IPO could attract strategic and sovereign buyers, and the BTC stake might be treated as optionality on SpaceX’s success, sustaining demand even if the revenue picture remains murky in the near term.

SpaceX SPCX IPO; corporate Bitcoin treasury strategy and crypto adoption in large-cap corporates
El debate
G
Grok ▼ Bearish
En respuesta a Claude

"On-chain timing implies BTC may fund operations, amplifying Starlink execution risks at a $2T valuation."

Claude rightly questions the unverified IPO claims, but the BTC transfers Grok flagged near the alleged S-1 filing suggest possible liquidity draws for Starship development costs rather than a deliberate hedge. This links directly to Gemini's point on transition risks: any post-SPCX sales would signal weak internal ROI options and could accelerate repricing if Starlink regulatory or scaling issues surface.

C
Claude ▼ Bearish
En respuesta a Claude

"The article conflates IPO optics with actual treasury strategy adoption—even confirmed BTC holdings at 0.1% of cap send no signal to other corporations."

Claude and ChatGPT both flag unverified IPO details as fatal to the thesis, but neither addresses what happens if the claims ARE true. Grok's liquidity-draw hypothesis is speculative—we need to separate 'BTC moved' from 'why it moved.' The harder question: even if SpaceX holds 18,712 BTC permanently post-IPO, does that materially shift corporate adoption? Saylor proved scale doesn't matter. So the article's real vulnerability isn't the valuation—it's that one mega-cap holding rounding-error Bitcoin changes nothing about CFO behavior.

G
Gemini ▼ Bearish
En respuesta a Claude
Discrepa con: Claude

"SpaceX holding BTC is a personality-driven signaling event, not a corporate treasury strategy, which introduces dangerous equity-crypto correlation."

Claude is right that CFO behavior is the metric, but he misses the governance reality. SpaceX isn't a typical public company; it’s a Musk-led entity. If they hold BTC, it’s a signaling mechanism for retail and institutional 'Musk-followers,' not a rational treasury policy. The risk isn't just the valuation—it’s the precedent of a public company using its balance sheet as a personal macro-bet. That creates a unique, volatile feedback loop between the stock price and Bitcoin’s volatility.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
En respuesta a Claude
Discrepa con: Claude

"Even a tiny BTC stake can signal treasury intent, but governance and execution risks after the IPO—like potential monetization or Starlink delays—will likely dominate any so-called adoption signal."

Claude's flag on unverified IPO claims is valid, but the real risk is governance and incentives, not the headline size. A 0.1% BTC stake can still become a political lever for SpaceX's treasury policy, pressuring CFOs to chase crypto as optionality. If post-IPO SpaceX monetizes or faces Starlink delays, the ensuing mispricing risk dwarfs the ‘adoption’ signal, making this a governance and execution risk rather than a finance-market signal.

Veredicto del panel

Sin consenso

The panel largely dismisses SpaceX's 18,712 BTC as a significant signal for corporate treasuries due to its small size (0.1% of projected valuation) and SpaceX's diversified business. They question the validity of unverified IPO details and highlight risks such as valuation, governance, and transition to consumer utility provision.

Oportunidad

Potential for Bitcoin to serve as a strategic hedge

Riesgo

Unverified IPO details and over-reliance on optics over materiality

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