SpaceX has long been one of the most closely watched private companies globally, combining cutting-edge aerospace innovation with the financial scale of a technology giant. The three prediction markets grouped here provide a comprehensive lens into how traders expect this company's potential path to public markets might unfold. The first market addresses the fundamental timing question: will SpaceX complete an initial public offering by December 31, 2027? This frames a two-year window for what would be a landmark moment in commercial space. The second and third markets shift focus to valuation outcomes at the moment of IPO—specifically whether SpaceX's market capitalization will exceed $1 trillion or fall below $500 billion on the first day of public trading. Together, these three questions form a natural progression: first, whether an IPO happens within this timeframe; second, which valuation bracket becomes reality. Traders pricing these markets are factoring in SpaceX's revenue growth trajectory, path to profitability, Starship development milestones, government contracts, and broader sentiment around mega-cap technology IPOs. The market price of each reflects collective confidence—or hesitation—about each outcome. A higher price on the IPO-by-2027 market indicates traders find the timing plausible; prices on the valuation markets reveal whether traders expect SpaceX to command premium valuations or settle at a still-extraordinary but more moderate level. Perhaps most importantly, these related markets let you read the conditional expectations embedded in prices: given that an IPO occurs, what valuation do traders anticipate? These snapshot prices update continuously as company developments, earnings reports, or market shifts reshape sentiment about SpaceX's public market debut.