Musk Is Leading SpaceX Into the Conglomerate Trap

SpaceX released the much anticipated prospectus for its initial public offering late Wednesday, and there are already signs the company is falling into the conglomerate trap.

Elon Musk has bucked the trend of industrial conglomerate breakups, including such illustrious companies as General Electric and Honeywell International Inc., and decided to form a somewhat unwieldy company that makes rockets, spacecraft, satellites, antennas, modems and now computer chips. With SpaceX’s purchase of Musk’s xAI in February, the world’s leading space company was married to an AI startup and the X social media platform.

GE decided to split up its aerospace, energy and healthcare businesses for a reason, and Honeywell is following suit by splitting off its aerospace unit, which is set to trade separately later this year. Conglomerates often tout the efficiencies of shared research or an operating model applied across businesses when in reality there is real danger in misallocation of resources and attention among the units. Value gets trapped as good businesses become starved of investment while struggling ones disproportionately drain resources.

From SpaceX’s filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission for the sale of shares, which could take place sometime next month, we learned that SpaceX’s Starlink doubled its satellite broadband subscribers to 10.3 million from a year ago and has been on that torrid pace of doubling customers since 2023. Connectivity, the unit that houses Starlink, posted income from operations of $4.4 billion last year. This business is thriving because Musk has a massive first-mover advantage on its low-Earth-orbit satellite network and lower launch costs than competitors.

We also learned that SpaceX’s AI unit, which is home to xAI and X, had a loss from operations of about $6.4 billion last year. Capital expenditures for this unit were $12.7 billion in 2025 as Musk rushes to catch up to his AI rivals, and the spending is accelerating. During the first quarter, capital expenditures at the AI unit were $7.7 billion. That contrasts with investment last year of $4.2 billion at the profitable Connectivity unit and $1.3 billion in the first quarter. This is a brewing misallocation of capital and a budding conglomerate trap.