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The SpaceX IPO marks a lopsided win for venture

SpaceX's IPO closed up 19%, pushing its valuation above $2 trillion in a historic debut, but the windfall is concentrated among top-tier VCs and asset managers, highlighting a bifurcated venture market. The success raises hopes for IPOs from OpenAI and Anthropic, though such a cluster of trillion-dollar offerings is unlikely to recur.

read3 min publishedJun 15, 2026

SpaceX’s IPO may be a real win for venture, but it’s a deeply skewed win.

“It’s a huge win for VC firms,” Kyle Stanford, PitchBook director of U.S. venture capital research, told me on Friday. “It’s a concentrated win, but the sentiment is that everyone can say: ‘VC is still creating these returns.’ Now, you have something where you can say that IPOs are on their way back. Because if SpaceX does great, we have some momentum.”

SpaceX did, in fact, do great. The company’s shares closed on its first day of trading up 19%, sending the its valuation above $2 trillion in a genuinely historic IPO. What happens next will be telling—OpenAI and Anthropic are chasing each other to public debuts that are looking increasingly inevitable.

“If OpenAI and Anthropic go out, maybe we have some companies starting to build a pipeline for an IPO in early 2027—regular unicorns, between $10 and $20 billion,” said Stanford. “That could be a big narrative.”

That narrative is key, because that narrative is hope for the overall venture market, which mostly won’t see a dime of SpaceX returns. In fact, an extraordinarily limited number of VCs are set for a major SpaceX return.

“If you look at SpaceX’s full cap table that we have, it’s not a bunch of emerging managers or mid-tier VCs,” said PitchBook’s Stanford. “It’s the best, and then all the other major asset managers in the world.”

So, venture, in its way, is looking more bifurcated than ever. Read my full story here to see who the biggest SpaceX investor winners are—and why Hot IPO Summer will likely be an unreachable benchmark for the rest of the century.

As Stanford pointed out, should 2026 be when SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic all go public: “Will something like this ever happen again? A trillion‑dollar IPO, let alone three in a year? The answer is probably no.”

See you tomorrow,

Allie GarfinkleX:

@agarfinks Email:

[alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com](mailto:alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com)

Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter [here](mailto:termsheet@fortune.com).

Joey Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter.Subscribe here.

VENTURE CAPITAL

  • PhoenixAI, a Menlo Park, Calif.-based agentic AI database platform, raised $80 million in Series B funding.

Sky9

Capital led the round and was joined by

Atypical

Ventures,

Olive

Technology

Ventures, and existing investors.

  • Turnout, a San Diego, Calif.-based AI-powered consumer advocacy platform, raised $35 million in Series A funding. HighPost Capital led the round and was joined by

Shine

Capital,

LGVP, and others.

  • Orbio, a Madrid, Spain-based AI system for enterprise and large workforce, raised $21 million in Series A funding.

Dawn

Capital led the round and was joined by existing investors.

  • REMEDY, a New York City-based skincare brand, raised $19 million in Series A funding. L Catterton led the round and was joined by

Sonoma

Brands and existing investor

Norwest.

  • ChatSee.ai, a San Francisco-based failure intelligence platform designed to help enterprises detect, classify, and remediate AI agent failures in production, raised $6.5 million in seed funding.

True

Ventures led the round and was joined by

First

Rays

Venture

Partners and

Seven

Hill

Ventures.

PRIVATE EQUITY

  • Relativity, backed by Permira and Silver Lake, acquired Gavel, a Los Angeles, Calif.-based AI-native legal technology company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

FUNDS + FUNDS OF FUNDS

  • Anterra Capital, an Amsterdam, The Netherlands and Boston, Mass.-based venture capital firm, raised $100 million for the first close of its third fund focused on food and agriculture companies.

PEOPLE

  • Sixth Street, a San Francisco-based investment firm, hired Jenny

Kim as a Capital Formation and Strategy Managing Director. Previously, she was with Goldman Sachs.

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