SpaceX's potential initial public offering represents one of the most closely watched corporate events in the aerospace and technology sectors. The nine prediction markets bundled here collectively track market expectations around the timing and likelihood of when Elon Musk's company will go public through 2026. These markets break down the potential IPO into specific time windows—June, October, November, and December—as well as including a market on whether the company will fail to complete an offering by year-end. By aggregating these related outcomes in one place, you can see the full picture of market sentiment surrounding SpaceX's path to becoming a publicly traded company. The prices you see below represent the collective assessment of thousands of participants weighing technical developments, regulatory approvals, market conditions, and Musk's public statements. Higher prices indicate stronger collective belief that a particular outcome will occur, while lower prices suggest market skepticism. Comparing prices across months reveals where market participants think an IPO is most likely—whether consensus leans toward an earlier date like June or a later window such as December. The relationship between the 'IPO occurs by [month]' and 'IPO fails by December 31' markets can also illuminate overall confidence: if all monthly windows are low while the failure market is high, it signals broad doubt about a near-term IPO. These prediction markets operate around the clock and update continuously as new information emerges about SpaceX's preparations, regulatory progress, and broader market conditions. Whether you're tracking the aerospace industry, following SpaceX's business developments, or studying how prediction markets price major corporate events, these aggregated markets provide transparent, real-time insight into collective expectations.