SpaceX vs. Rocket Lab: A Tale of High Valuations and Risk-Reward Dynamics in the Space Race
June 12, 2026
SpaceX remains the top-tier, high-quality name in the sector, offering leadership and scale, but at a very high valuation that raises questions about how much growth must be realized to justify it.
Rocket Lab presents a higher-risk, higher-reward profile for investors seeking outsized gains, with growth across multiple space segments and stronger near-term profitability signals, albeit with ongoing execution risk.
SpaceX has evolved into a technology conglomerate, with Starlink as the main profit engine generating substantial operating income in 2025, while an AI unit burned significant cash in 2025 and into early 2026.
Rocket Lab’s market capitalization is around $70 billion, offering potential growth if Neutron succeeds, though the company remains unprofitable and has faced development delays.
Rocket Lab completed 21 launches in 2025 with a perfect mission success rate and secured an $816 million contract from the U.S. Space Development Agency to build 18 satellites.
SpaceX’s IPO priced at about $135 per share, valuing the company near $1.77 trillion, making it one of the largest public offerings and prompting questions about the premium valuation.
Rocket Lab reported 2025 revenue of roughly $602 million (up 38% year over year) and $200 million in Q1 2026, with a backlog above $2 billion indicating real revenue momentum.
SpaceX dominates modern space with leadership in launches and Starlink, and is developing Starship for broader missions, though the lofty valuation sets a high bar for future growth justification.
Rocket Lab’s Neutron, a larger partially reusable rocket expected to launch late 2026, could broaden opportunities for large contracts but faces development and profitability risks.
Across the board, SpaceX and Rocket Lab trade around similar price-to-sales multiples, but Rocket Lab’s growth prospects are deemed more compelling given its smaller base and broader growth trajectory.
Doubling SpaceX’s IPO valuation would require a move beyond $3.5 trillion, underscoring the extreme premium currently embedded in its stock.
Rocket Lab offers a differentiated risk-reward profile as a space-focused company exposed to launch services, satellites, spacecraft components, solar arrays, and flight software.
Summary based on 2 sources
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Sources

The Motley Fool • Jun 11, 2026
SpaceX IPO vs. Rocket Lab: Which Space Economy Stock Is the Better Buy?
Foreign Policy Journal • Jun 12, 2026
SpaceX IPO Valuation Creates Opening For Rocket Lab (NASDAQ: RKLB) As The Smarter Space Economy Bet