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Can the market value of a company surpass the total global GDP? This question once only existed in science fiction. But with a prominent entrepreneur's public statement, the "impossible" is turning into a possible discussion.
According to the latest information, the ultimate valuation target for a commercial space company has been set at $100 trillion. The current valuation has already reached $80 billion, and its IPO plan for 2026 is also underway. Once listed, the management, holding billions in capital and cash flow, is no longer aiming solely for commercial profits but for infrastructure construction at a civilization level.
Where is this $100 trillion supported from? The answer is clear: space industrialization.
It has been officially confirmed that around 2030, a permanent outpost will be established on the Moon. But more aggressive plans come from the commercial sector—transforming the Moon into a fully automated industrial planet.
Imagine such a production process: thousands of AI-controlled industrial robots operate on the lunar surface, laying solar arrays and building fully automated factories. AI-driven production lines mass-produce satellites, communication equipment, and computing nodes in a vacuum environment. Most importantly, the entire satellite industry chain—production, assembly, launch—is completed on the Moon. Finished products are directly shot into deep space orbits using electromagnetic mass drivers, like bullets.
What does this mean? Launch costs are driven down to physical limits, completely rewriting the economics of the satellite industry. Earth is constrained by gravity, energy is expensive, and rocket costs are high, while the Moon offers low gravity, abundant mineral resources, and a vacuum environment—making it a natural industrial manufacturing site.
The curtain of space economy has just begun to rise.