SpaceX’s Nasdaq debut on June 12 made Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire and turned thousands of employees into millionaires. In fact, according to an analysis by pre-IPO trading platform Hill.com cited by The New York Times, more than 4,400 current and former SpaceX employees are expected to hold stock worth at least $1 million, with roughly 400 holding stakes above $100 million.
For many HR leaders, this may seem irrelevant because they don’t run pre-IPO companies, and most never will. But underneath the windfall, SpaceX’s offering is widely viewed as the first in a wave of AI-linked listings. OpenAI and Anthropic are both expected to pursue public offerings that could value each company above $1 trillion, and Reuters has described SpaceX’s performance as a “litmus test” case that the market will watch closely. Some experts consider this a sign of a tighter market for the engineers, researchers and operators who build and deploy AI systems.
Creating millionaires
The SpaceX story is unusual in scale, but the pattern of equity compensation is not new, according to reports. When Google went public in 2004, the listing created an estimated 900 to 1,000 on-paper millionaires among its employees. Facebook’s 2012 IPO produced a similar or even larger cohort of employee millionaires, but the wealth was concentrated more heavily among executives and early investors. SpaceX’s wealth creation event is, according to Hill.com founder Andrew Benson’s account to The New York Times, unusual because it is rare for an IPO to push hundreds of non-founder employees past the $100 million mark.
The offering reveals how much the market values AI capabilities and how scarce that talent remains. SpaceX acquired and merged with its AI unit xAI ahead of the IPO, and analysts framed the move as a gain for AI and engineering talent.
It is also marked as the largest IPO in history, and SpaceX’s market value closed its first day of trading above $2.2 trillion. Soon after, the Wall Street Journal said the org surpassed Amazon as the world’s fifth-most valuable public company. Wall Street’s enthusiasm for the offering suggests that AI talent will compound in value.
Read more: Who’s right about the skills gap: Employers or employees?
Attracting AI talent
The thirst for AI-skilled talent is common these days, whether or not a company is headed for a public listing. Engineers and researchers with strong AI chops have more employers competing over them than at any point in recent memory.
Talent surveys and recruiter interviews consistently point to a set of priorities among AI professionals. In Semafor and G42’s recent AI Talent Report, which surveyed more than 1,500 AI specialists globally, the top motivators beyond pay were intellectual autonomy, ethical alignment and access to meaningful data sets that drive real-world impact (42% said they rejected roles due to outdated tech stacks and lack of mission clarity).
A separate BCG survey of nearly 900,000 workers found that for the first time, job security has become the number-one work preference, especially among those concerned about GenAI’s impact on their jobs. “To attract and retain talent, employers need to solve a complex puzzle,” wrote the report authors. “They must anticipate the impact of technology on their workforce and offer robust reskilling programs to help employees stay competitive.”
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