SpaceX, the aerospace and space transportation company founded by Elon Musk, has long been the subject of speculation regarding a potential initial public offering. This collection of prediction markets explores the possible outcomes surrounding a SpaceX IPO and its potential market valuation. The group includes markets tracking whether SpaceX will go public by the end of 2027, alongside several markets reflecting different market cap scenarios—ranging from below $1.5 trillion to above $3.5 trillion. Rather than assessing individual outcomes in isolation, these markets together form a probability distribution that reveals collective expectations about SpaceX's potential public debut. The prices reflect how participants believe the various scenarios compare against one another, creating a forward-looking view of both timing and valuation. When comparing these prices, look for patterns in how probability weight distributes across the valuation ranges. If a particular range shows notably higher probability than others, it suggests confidence in that scenario. The presence of meaningful probability on the "no IPO by 2027" market provides context for how viable a public offering is considered within that timeframe. These markets function as a price-discovery mechanism for expectations that traditional analysis might capture less directly. Because prediction markets require participants to stake on specific outcomes, they reveal conviction more clearly than surveys or commentary. The relationships between different valuation ranges—how their probabilities move or diverge—highlight which scenarios the market views as most plausible and where uncertainty concentrates. This cluster is valuable for investors monitoring SpaceX's trajectory, aerospace industry observers tracking privatization trends, and those interested in how prediction markets price major corporate events.