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 became one of the first major institutional investors in SpaceX, acquiring a 7.5% stake when the company was valued at approximately $10 billion. All available evidence suggests Alphabet has maintained this position throughout the intervening years.
At a $1.5 trillion valuation, this 7.5% stake would be worth roughly $112 billion. While this represents only a modest slice of Alphabet’s $4 trillion market capitalization, it means every share of Alphabet stock essentially contains embedded SpaceX exposure. For investors seeking SpaceX participation without the extreme valuations associated with direct IPO entry, purchasing Alphabet shares provides a straightforward mechanism to own a fractional stake in SpaceX through an established, publicly traded vehicle.
Direct Pre-IPO Access: The Secondary Market Route
For accredited investors meeting specific income and net worth thresholds—$200,000 in annual income ($300,000 for married couples) or $1 million net worth (excluding primary residence)—several platforms facilitate secondary market transactions in private company shares. Firms including Forge Global (soon to be acquired by Charles Schwab), EquityZen, and Hiive enable accredited investors to purchase shares from existing stakeholders, such as employees exercising stock options before their company’s public debut.
This approach offers theoretically better pricing than the eventual IPO, since participants are buying from existing shareholders rather than new issuance. However, potential investors should understand a critical caveat: these platforms frequently facilitate indirect ownership structures. Your purchase may grant you shares of an investment vehicle that itself holds SpaceX equity, rather than direct SpaceX shares. While this still provides SpaceX exposure, the indirect ownership layer introduces additional complexity and potential fee structures worth investigating.
Venture Capital Approach: The Diversified Exposure Model
Cathie Wood’s Ark Venture Fund (NASDAQ: ARKVX) represents an alternative pathway, structured as a publicly traded venture capital fund holding equity in dozens of pre-IPO technology companies. By purchasing Ark Venture Fund shares, investors gain simultaneous exposure to SpaceX alongside numerous other emerging enterprises—from AI companies like Perplexity and xAI to aviation innovator Boom Supersonic and prediction market pioneer Kalshi.
This approach carries different risk-return characteristics. Rather than concentrating on SpaceX, your capital is diversified across a portfolio of venture-stage companies with varying probabilities of success. Some investors view this diversification as a significant advantage; others consider it a disadvantage if SpaceX specifically drives their investment thesis.
Comparing Your Investment Pathways
Each route presents distinct tradeoffs worth systematic evaluation:
Direct Alphabet shares offer maximum simplicity and lowest barriers to entry (available to all investors), but your SpaceX exposure is diluted within a massive diversified tech conglomerate. You’re purchasing significant non-SpaceX assets—search, advertising, cloud infrastructure—alongside the SpaceX stake.
Secondary market platforms potentially offer better pre-IPO valuations than the eventual public offering, but require accredited investor status, introduce indirect ownership structures, and may carry higher fees. Timing and pricing information on secondary markets can also be asymmetrical.
Ark Venture Fund provides genuine venture capital exposure with portfolio diversification reducing single-company risk, but dilutes SpaceX investment across 50+ companies, many with substantially higher risk profiles than SpaceX.
The Closing Window for Pre-IPO Entry
As 2026 progresses and SpaceX’s public market debut draws closer, the window for pre-IPO participation continues narrowing. Whether through Alphabet’s established stake, secondary market transactions, or venture capital funds, the economics of acquiring SpaceX exposure below the $1.5 trillion IPO valuation will only become more constrained.
For investors convinced SpaceX represents compelling long-term value, each pathway offers distinct advantages depending on risk tolerance, capital availability, and investment philosophy. The key question isn’t which single path is “correct,” but rather which aligns most closely with your personal circumstances and investment objectives before the IPO transforms SpaceX into a public market commodity.