SpaceX Bankers Kick Off Marketing for Debut High-Grade Bond Sale

SpaceX is selling investment-grade bonds for the first time in what’s expected to be the start of a massive borrowing spree to fund the company’s AI ambitions following its record $75 billion IPO.

Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Morgan Stanley — the banks that provided temporary bridge financing to the company — are arranging calls with investors on Monday, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified because they’re not authorized to speak publicly.

A bond offering is expected to follow, with maturities of between five and 30 years, the person said.

Elon Musk’s rocket, satellite and AI conglomerate is seeking to raise at least $20 billion from the offering, Bloomberg reported last week. Proceeds will refinance the bridge loan of roughly the same size, a facility that makes up the bulk of SpaceX’s $29.1 billion of long-term debt.

SpaceX received ratings in the BBB tier from all three major bond graders last week, paving the way for cheaper borrowing. Moody’s Ratings and Fitch Ratings graded SpaceX’s debt at Baa1 and BBB+ respectively, or three steps above junk. S&P Global Ratings assigned a BBB rating, one notch lower.

SpaceX’s record-breaking initial public offering turned the start-up into one of the world’s most valuable public companies and its founder into the world’s first trillionaire. The company held almost $101 billion in cash and equivalents as of June 19, it said in a filing.

In previous meetings with prospective equity investors, the company’s finance chief Bret Johnsen and President Gwynne Shotwell said they expect the IPO was the last time SpaceX would sell stock. Instead of raising billions by diluting shareholders — as well as Musk himself — the plan is to tap debt markets after it touted investment-grade ratings throughout the IPO process, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

If SpaceX Has So Much Cash, Why Tap Bond Markets? Credit React