Forget the SpaceX IPO in 2026. This space stock is 1500 times cheaper.

By now you’ve heard the news: SpaceX will conduct an initial public offering in 2026 — at a $1.5 trillion valuation. CEO Elon Musk personally owns 42% of the company. Added to the $484 billion Musk is already worth, a $1.5 trillion valuation on SpaceX would officially make him the world’s first trillionaire.

wow

Despite all the talk about how people don’t like billionaires these days, investors seem more than happy to give Musk a 1,000x on that goal. They are lining up to participate in SpaceX’s IPO, unable to resist the prospect of owning a piece of the world’s largest and most successful space company.

I personally think it’s a bad idea. As we argued last month, SpaceX is likely to trade at a sky-high price of nearly 70 times annual sales, which we called “a valuation that’s very hard to defend.”

But what if you could buy a stock that looked a lot like SpaceX and cost 1,500 times less?

Image source: Getty Images.

No, I’m not talking about US space companies The rocket lab (NASDAQ:RKLB) or Blue Origin today. (Although Rocket Lab has it was a pretty great investment, and I happen to think Blue Origin might be one too.)

Instead, today I want to talk about LandSpace, arguably China’s best private space company and the closest thing China has to its own version of SpaceX.

China has a plethora of space start-ups with out-of-this-world names such as iSpace, Galactic Energy and Space Pioneer. However, LandSpace probably leads the pack in China.

Founded in 2015, LandSpace is 13 years younger than SpaceX and, apples to apples, is probably over a decade behind SpaceX in terms of development. Still, I’d say it’s the best China has right now.

Best known for its liquid oxygen and liquid methane fueled Zhuque‑2 rocket, LandSpace first reached orbit in 2013; that rocket has flown four times since then. LandSpace’s latest project is the Zhuque-3 rocket. Not an original name — not an original idea. Modeled after SpaceX’s reusable Falcon 9, the Zhuque-3 reached orbit in December 2025, but crashed during the landing attempt (as did the first few reusable Falcon 9s).

In 2026, LandSpace aims to perfect the process. Twelve launches are planned this year and perhaps as many as 12 landing attempts. If the company’s performance is similar to that of SpaceX, at least one of these should succeed.

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