3 Better Trillion-Dollar Stocks to Buy Instead of SpaceX
Written by Geoffrey Seiler for The Motley Fool -> Nvidia's first-quarter profits were vastly higher than SpaceX's 2025 revenue. Apple has one of the best business models, while SpaceX has a largely
Nvidia's first-quarter profits were vastly higher than SpaceX's 2025 revenue. Apple has one of the best business models, while SpaceX has a largely u
Read Full Story at Nasdaq News โThe comparison between trillion-dollar tech giants like Nvidia and Apple and SpaceXโs valuation trajectory raises broader questions about where capital flowsโand why. While SpaceXโs ambitions in space travel and satellite internet capture headlines, its revenue in 2025 remains a fraction of what Nvidia and Apple generate in a single quarter. This disparity underscores a critical tension in todayโs market: innovation alone doesnโt guarantee financial dominance, nor does it always align with immediate profitability. Investors are increasingly prioritizing companies that deliver consistent earnings growth over those chasing long-term, capital-intensive visions, even if those visions promise transformative change. This trend reflects a shift in investor psychology. During the early days of the internet, companies like Amazon operated at massive losses for years, rewarding patience with eventual dominance. Today, the bar for such patience has risen. The rise of AI has made Nvidiaโs data center dominance a safer bet for short-to-medium-term gains, while Appleโs fortress-like ecosystem ensures recurring revenue streams and high margins. SpaceX, by contrast, must balance the high costs of rocket launches with the uncertain returns of Starlinkโs global broadband ambitions. The companyโs recent funding roundsโvaluing it at over $180 billionโhint at private market enthusiasm, but public investors may demand more concrete milestones before granting it trillion-dollar status. What happens next could redraw the boundaries of whatโs considered investable. If SpaceXโs Starship succeeds in reducing launch costs or Starlink achieves mass adoption, its valuation could catch up toโor surpassโthese tech titans. Conversely, if delays or failures mount, the market may reassert its preference for proven cash cows. Broader trends also play a role: the increasing scrutiny of private markets, the push for ESG compliance in space ventures, and the geopolitical risks of relying on a single company for global connectivity could all influence SpaceXโs path to profitability. For now, the question isnโt whether SpaceX will change the worldโitโs whether the world will pay for the privilege of watching it try.

