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So SpaceX's about to go public and there's something interesting buried in the fine print that nobody's really talking about yet. The company's sitting on roughly 8,285 bitcoin right now, and here's where it gets awkward for Elon Musk and the team.
That BTC stack is worth around $545 million today. But get this - back in December, the same holdings were valued at nearly $780 million. That's a $235 million paper loss in just three months without SpaceX selling a single coin. All because the bitcoin price has been volatile.
When the IPO filing drops this March (targeting a June listing that could value SpaceX above $1.75 trillion), investors are going to see this position for the first time. And they're going to have to watch it fluctuate on the balance sheet every quarter. The elon musk bitcoin price movements will literally show up as gains or losses in their earnings reports.
Tesla already went through this. Musk's automaker has had hundreds of millions in paper losses on its crypto holdings over the years, creating this recurring headline problem that sometimes overshadows what the company actually does. The difference? Tesla reported $94.8 billion in revenue last year, so bitcoin noise is relatively small. For SpaceX, we don't know the scale yet, but you can bet analysts will be watching every bitcoin price swing.
What's actually interesting is that SpaceX has never traded this position. Unlike Tesla, which has bought and sold, SpaceX just held through every cycle since early 2026 when they accumulated it. The stack peaked around $2 billion back in late 2021, crashed through 2022, and has been bouncing between $400-800 million ever since.
So when the S-1 hits, investors will get their first real look at SpaceX's elon musk bitcoin price exposure. And honestly, timing could've been worse - at least the bitcoin price is holding above $73K, though that's still down from the December levels. Either way, this is going to be a fascinating case study in how crypto volatility plays out inside the world's biggest planned IPO. The market's going to have to decide whether this is just noise or actually material to the company's fundamentals.