Tesla has officially secured a small equity stake in SpaceX after converting its earlier investment in Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI following the merger between the two firms.
Tesla has received regulatory clearance to convert its $2 billion investment in xAI into shares of SpaceX after the recent merger between Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company and the space launch giant. The development was revealed in Federal Trade Commission filings dated March 11, 2026, according to Bloomberg.
The restructuring means Tesla shareholders now indirectly own a minority stake in SpaceX, positioning the electric vehicle company to benefit if SpaceX moves forward with its expected public listing later this year.
The move stems from Tesla’s previously disclosed $2 billion investment in xAI, Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence startup focused on building large-scale AI systems. After SpaceX merged with xAI earlier in 2026, Tesla’s investment was automatically transferred into equity within the combined entity.
As a result of the restructuring:
While the exact percentage stake has not been publicly disclosed, analysts estimate Tesla’s holding is below 1 percent.
Additional documents cited by Bloomberg indicate that Elon Musk sold some SpaceX shares to investors, including Valor Equity Partners and DFJ Growth, around the same time Tesla converted its investment.
The equity conversion follows a major restructuring inside Elon Musk’s business empire. In February 2026, SpaceX acquired xAI, combining the artificial intelligence startup with the world’s most active rocket launch company.
The merger created a combined company valued at roughly $1.25 trillion, making it one of the most valuable private technology entities in the world.
The strategic logic behind the merger centers on integrating AI infrastructure with space based technology. SpaceX can provide the launch capabilities and satellite network needed to support xAI’s massive computing ambitions.
Plans reportedly include:
Tesla’s new stake also comes at a time when SpaceX is reportedly preparing for a U.S. public listing.
Market speculation suggests the company could pursue an initial public offering as early as mid 2026, potentially valuing SpaceX at around $1.5 trillion.
If that valuation holds, the offering could become the largest IPO ever recorded, drawing enormous attention from both technology and space industry investors.
For Tesla shareholders, the restructuring provides indirect exposure to SpaceX’s growth and potential IPO upside, even though the company’s stake remains relatively small.
Despite the potential upside, the decision has raised questions among some investors. Critics argue that capital is increasingly flowing between Elon Musk’s interconnected companies, which could create conflicts of interest.
Tesla’s involvement in SpaceX through the converted investment highlights the growing overlap between Musk’s businesses, which now span electric vehicles, artificial intelligence, satellite communications, space launch systems, and robotics.
However, the FTC approval indicates regulators did not find immediate antitrust concerns related to the restructuring.
In my experience covering tech companies, this move looks less like a simple investment change and more like strategic consolidation across Elon Musk’s ecosystem. I found the timing particularly interesting because it happens right before a potential SpaceX IPO.
If SpaceX really moves forward with a trillion dollar public listing, Tesla shareholders suddenly gain exposure to one of the most valuable space companies on the planet without Tesla needing to deploy new capital.
That said, I believe investors will continue watching how money and ownership move across Musk’s companies. The connections between Tesla, SpaceX, xAI, and Starlink are getting tighter every year. Whether this creates massive value or governance concerns will likely depend on how transparent these structures remain.
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