TLDR
- SpaceX debuted publicly in June 2026 at a valuation above $2 trillion, making it one of the most valuable U.S. companies
- SpaceX posted $18.67 billion in revenue in 2025 but also recorded a $4.94 billion net loss
- Rocket Lab reported record Q1 2026 revenue of $200.3 million, up 63.5% year over year
- Rocket Lab holds a record backlog of $2.2 billion and over $2 billion in total liquidity
- Both companies offer different risk profiles: SpaceX for scale, Rocket Lab for public-market growth
SpaceX has long been the dominant name in commercial space. Its June 2026 public market debut gave investors their first chance to own shares directly, at a valuation that quickly climbed past $2 trillion. That puts it among the most valuable companies in the United States.
But Rocket Lab has quietly been building its own space business. Smaller in scale, but growing fast, it has become the most-watched public space stock for investors who want exposure to the sector.
SpaceX: Massive Scale, Massive Losses
SpaceX generated $18.67 billion in revenue in 2025, up from $14.02 billion the year before. Despite that growth, the company posted a net loss of $4.94 billion as spending increased across Starship development, Starlink expansion, and other programs.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp., SPCX
SpaceX is not just a launch company. It combines rocket launches with Starlink satellite broadband, creating a business model no public rival can currently match.
Elon Musk has said he believes SpaceX could reach $1 trillion in annual revenue by 2030. Analysts are far more cautious about that target.
The bull case is clear: SpaceX already leads the launch market and has a recurring revenue engine in Starlink. The bear case is also clear: investors are paying a huge premium while the company continues to lose money.
Rocket Lab: Smaller, But Growing Fast
Rocket Lab reported record revenue of $200.3 million in Q1 2026, up 63.5% year over year. Full-year 2025 revenue came in at around $602 million. Its backlog hit a record $2.2 billion, with over $2 billion in total liquidity.
The company is no longer just a small launch provider. It now covers launch services, spacecraft components, defense programs, and broader space systems.
Yahoo Finance described Rocket Lab as the natural public comparison to SpaceX heading into the IPO. Many investors used it as a proxy during the run-up to SpaceX’s debut.
Rocket Lab’s bull case rests on execution. Its Neutron rocket program, growing backlog, and expanding space systems business give it several paths to continued growth from a smaller base.
The bear case is dependence on contract timing, program milestones, and the success of Neutron. It is nowhere near SpaceX in revenue or launch scale.
Two Very Different Investment Cases
SpaceX offers leadership and long-term scale. Rocket Lab offers a more grounded public-market growth story with a valuation easier to grow into.
SpaceX may have the stronger business overall. But Rocket Lab may be the easier stock to build a case around for investors focused on execution upside at a more manageable size.
Both companies are competing in the same industry. But they are not competing for the same investor.
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