Science

Elon Musk’s SpaceX Reportedly Looking to Raise $1.7 Billion in Fresh Funding

Aerospace firm SpaceX is looking to raise $1.7 billion (roughly Rs. 13,192 crore) in fresh funding, a massive initiative as its controversial founder Elon Musk continues to make news, television channel CNBC reported Sunday.

Citing a company-wide email the network said it obtained, CNBC reported the space travel pioneer would be paying $70 (roughly Rs. 5,430) a share — 25 percent above the $56 (roughly Rs. 4,345) a share the stock traded for in February after a stock split.

That would value the 20-year-old firm — the first private company to send astronauts into orbit, among many other firsts — at $127 billion (roughly Rs. 9,85,650 crore).

That valuation has climbed steadily in recent years as SpaceX raised billions to finance work on its next-generation Starship rocket and its Starlink global satellite internet network.

Meanwhile, independent online website Insider reported this week that SpaceX had paid $250,000 (roughly Rs. 2 crore) to resolve a complaint for alleged sexual misconduct by Musk against an attendant on a SpaceX corporate jet.

The 50-year-old Musk has rejected the charge, saying Thursday on Twitter that “for the record, those wild accusations are utterly untrue.”

Musk, who is also the CEO of carmaker Tesla, said he was making a $44 billion (roughly Rs. 3,41,501 crore) offer to buy Twitter.

But this week he said he first needed clarity on the prevalence of fake or spam accounts on the popular social media platform before moving forward with the purchase.


Articles You May Like

Exit poll may appear decisive – but path to coalition is not clear yet
Low-paid jobs at risk from Labour’s tax increases on businesses
Musk’s xAI releases artificial intelligence model Grok 3, claims better performance than rivals in early testing
Elon is setting up shop in India as first Tesla Semi station gets real (6 years late)
Gangs ‘make millions’ from illegal tipping – as beaches covered in builders’ rubble and household waste