社交媒体讨论SpaceX和OpenAI的IPO进展,并提及Anthropic年化收入440亿美元、第一季度收入50亿美元,OpenAI第一季度收入54-55亿美元,Nvidia营收816亿美元。同时涉及AI领域投资策略变化及多家公司融资动态。
Holy s***. Last week was the Superbowl of S-1’s.
SpaceX and OpenAI. This is happening.
The largest IPO in history is taking shape.
I sat down with @jasonlk and @rodriscoll to discuss the filing, along with the biggest news in tech this week:
My notes below:
OpenAI may need to rush its IPO to protect its category leader narrative from Anthropic. OpenAI did $5.4B to $5.5B in Q1, while Anthropic generated $5B, matching its entire prior year in a single quarter. With Anthropic growing 10x year over year versus OpenAI’s 2 to 3x pace, it could soon become the bigger, more profitable business.
The venture playbook has shifted from the SaaS era. VCs now have to back higher valuations on far less information. Waiting for one-year renewals or clean trailing data is a losing strategy because AI adoption curves move too fast. Success now requires acting on raw product traction and market conviction.
Traditional seed investing has become a bottleneck. The winning move is wiring capital the moment a breakout leader emerges. These startups can move from pre-revenue to hyper-scale almost overnight, so investors have to underwrite real-time momentum instead of waiting for the market to settle.
At 100x trailing sales, SpaceX risks becoming the GeoCities deal of the AI era if market euphoria fades. Its valuation is detached from traditional discounted cash flow models and depends on a massive Elon Premium that multiplies its baseline economic value.
Combining unrelated assets into the SpaceX S-1 looks like financial engineering designed to hide weaker pieces of the story. It uses AI hype to absorb Twitter’s revenue collapse and expensive chip clusters that failed to compete with OpenAI. It feels like SolarCity on steroids, using a clean private business to bail out an insular investor circle.
Starlink will likely drive most of SpaceX’s value. Terrestrial data centers remain a low-ROE business, and space data centers are still negligible. The valuation only works if Jensen Huang’s $3T to $4T CapEx vision hits by 2030 and Earth power constraints force compute infrastructure into space.
Blaming layoffs on COVID overhiring does not hold up after years of normal attrition. Corporate America is redirecting opex from mid-level headcount toward token budgets and agentic automation. Companies are cutting average roles to overpay elite, highly productive talent who use AI workflows to multiply output.
(links below)
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