A potential SpaceX initial public offering is generating sustained attention from Gulf sovereign wealth funds that have spent the past two years building concentrated positions across the AI technology stack — and recognising that Starlink’s satellite internet network represents a connectivity layer that is conspicuously absent from portfolios already covering AI model developers, semiconductor supply chains, and data centre infrastructure. Bloomberg reported in June 2026 that Gulf investors including Abu Dhabi’s MGX — which previously led a $30 billion investment in Anthropic and participated in OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI — are watching SpaceX’s IPO trajectory closely. A SpaceX listing at the valuations being discussed in secondary markets would rank among the largest technology IPOs in history.
Why Starlink Completes the Gulf AI Infrastructure Portfolio
Gulf sovereign funds have built substantial positions in AI model developers (Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI), semiconductor companies (ARM, NVIDIA supply chain adjacents), and data centre infrastructure (Microsoft-BlackRock AI Infrastructure Partnership, Brookfield’s $100 billion AI programme). The missing component is connectivity: the network infrastructure that delivers AI services to users in geographically dispersed locations that terrestrial fibre and cellular networks cannot reach economically. Starlink — with over 4 million subscribers globally across remote areas, maritime routes, aviation, and government connectivity contracts — is the world’s most commercially advanced satellite internet constellation. As AI inference becomes the dominant form of AI compute delivery, the low-latency satellite network that carries responses to end users becomes a critical infrastructure asset, and Starlink has a lead in satellite broadband that no current competitor can close in the near term.
The $26 Billion Context: Gulf Funds Have Capital Ready to Deploy
The scale of Gulf sovereign wealth fund activity — approximately $26 billion deployed across global assets in the March to May 2026 period by the five largest Gulf sovereign spenders alone — provides context for understanding the nature of Gulf interest in a SpaceX IPO. These are funds with genuine portfolio-scale capital available for deployment into high-conviction, long-duration technology infrastructure positions. A SpaceX IPO would be an institutional event rather than a retail one — the kind of large-scale allocation decision that Gulf sovereign funds are well positioned to participate in meaningfully. KIA’s recent entry as the first non-founder anchor in the Microsoft-BlackRock AI Infrastructure Partnership ($30 billion programme) and Brookfield’s $100 billion AI infrastructure fund both demonstrate that Gulf funds are willing to commit at institutional scale to technology infrastructure they identify as strategic — a disposition that directly applies to a potential SpaceX-Starlink public offering.



