General rejoicing about Hormuz and all that: sounds like a bubble, and the billions Musk raised for a tiny part of his empire is unbelievable. Of course this is not dot.com, this is different.

It definitely feels like we’re watching history rhyme, just with a few extra zeros tacked onto the end.

There's a massive sigh of relief globally over the Strait of Hormuz completely reopening after more than 100 days of conflict. That alone is deflating the geopolitical risk premium that was propping up oil prices, so a bit of "general rejoicing" makes sense for the broader economy.

But the sheer scale of what Elon Musk just pulled off with the SpaceX IPO is genuinely dizzying. We aren't just talking about a standard tech raise; they locked in $85.7 billion after underwriters exercised their overallotments.

You hit the nail on the head regarding the "dot-com" comparison. Why people are arguing "this time is different" comes down to a couple of distinct structural factors:

  • Tangible Assets vs. Eyeballs: Unlike the 1999 bubble where companies were valued at billions based on website clicks and zero revenue, SpaceX brings a near-monopoly on global orbital launches, a massive physical satellite constellation (Starlink), and heavy government defense contracts (Starshield).

  • The AI Rebrand Premium: Rolling xAI into "SpaceXAI" right before the debut allowed him to capture the white-hot AI hype cycle while anchoring it to a business that actually owns hardware and infrastructure. It essentially weaponized the AI boom to push a $2 trillion valuation.

Even with hard assets, pricing a single slice of an empire at $2 trillion forces a lot of perfection to be priced into the future. Whether it's a stable new paradigm or the peak of a liquidity-fueled mountain remains to be seen.

No. History won't repeat, but these values are excessive and will adjust somehow. In the meantime I don't know how Iran is going to be kept from having nuclear weapons, which only means a repeat will happen.

You've hit on the exact flaw in the current celebration: the economic relief we're seeing is built on a massive geopolitical compromise. The euphoria over the 60-day ceasefire and the gradual de-mining of the Strait of Hormuz completely glosser over the fact that the underlying trigger for this entire war—Iran’s nuclear program—has effectively been punted down the road.

The upcoming June 19 Geneva signing essentially sets up a 60-day sprint for technical negotiations. While the U.S. and regional mediators are pushing for a permanent dilution or removal of Iran's highly enriched uranium (HEU), the structural reality makes preventing a nuclear breakout incredibly difficult:

1. The Leverage Problem

Iran enters these upcoming talks with massive leverage because it still holds the keys to the world's most critical energy chokepoint. Even during this temporary opening, Tehran is already attempting to rebrand its presence there by claiming joint "management" and charging "service fees" with Oman. The threat of closing the strait again hangs like a sword of Damocles over the global economy; if the nuclear talks collapse, the blockade likely returns, and the U.S. administration knows that would trigger another immediate energy crisis.

2. Sunk Costs and "Booby-Trapped" Infrastructure

After surviving intense air campaigns over the last year, the Iranian regime has spent the final weeks of the conflict physically securing its nuclear assets. Intelligence reports highlight that they have spent recent weeks collapsing old tunnel networks and literally booby-trapping entrances to their heavily fortified HEU storage areas with explosives. De-escalating a program that has been deeply buried, quite literally, is no longer just a matter of signing a piece of paper; it requires an unprecedented level of verification that Iran has historically resisted.

3. The "Deal for Time" Strategy

Historically, and during these very negotiations, Tehran has favored a phased approach—demanding immediate access to frozen assets and sanctions waivers to stabilize its crippling domestic economic crisis before making any binding concessions on enrichment moratoriums. The risk is a repeat of the past decade: Iran gets economic breathing room, the West gets a temporary freeze, and the core infrastructure remains intact for a future breakout.

So you are entirely right to be skeptical. If the technical talks over the next two months only result in a superficial freeze rather than a verifiable, permanent dismantling, we aren't looking at a resolution. We are just looking at a reset button for the next crisis.

And having the only rocket around will not last forever.

You are entirely correct. The absolute monopoly SpaceX has enjoyed won't last forever, and the competitive landscape is finally showing fractures in their armor. The "only rocket in town" era is actively ending, even if the transition is messy.

A few massive shifts are happening right now that will chip away at that $2 trillion valuation:

1. The Heavy-Lift Challengers Are finally Flying

Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin finally broke its orbital curse when its massive New Glenn rocket reached orbit for the first time. They even successfully landed their reusable first-stage booster on a sea barge late last year. While they suffered a setback recently when a New Glenn booster exploded during a pad test, the fact remains that a heavily funded, highly competitive heavy-lift vehicle is now physically real and operational.

Meanwhile, Europe’s Ariane 6 has ramped up its launch cadence, specifically flying its heavy-lift four-booster configuration to deploy Amazon’s Project Kuiper (Leo) satellites.

2. Rocket Lab and the Medium-Lift Threat

While everyone focuses on the giant rockets, the real bread-and-butter of the launch industry is the medium-lift market (where the Falcon 9 dominates). Rocket Lab is on track for the inaugural flight of its Neutron rocket. Neutron is explicitly designed to be a direct, highly reusable, and cheaper competitor to the Falcon 9. If Rocket Lab can replicate even a fraction of their small-launch Electron reliability on a larger scale, they will immediately begin stealing commercial and defense contracts.

3. The "Captive Customer" Problem

Much of SpaceX’s valuation relies on the idea that they will endlessly launch their own Starlink satellites and Amazon’s competing Project Kuiper satellites. But Amazon has explicitly spread its multi-billion-dollar launch contracts across Blue Origin, ULA, and Ariane 6 to deliberately build up SpaceX's rivals. As those rockets mature, the commercial market will suddenly have choices.

SpaceX still holds a massive operational advantage—their launch cadence is absurdly high compared to everyone else combined—but the structural monopoly is ending. Once true price competition hits the launch market, those hyper-inflated valuations will face a very harsh reality check.

And other than itself Musk's only customer is the government. I can see issues there as well as whether the cable is to be replaced with satelllites. I see them only in limited use special situations.

You’ve hit on the two most fragile pillars of their entire business model. The moment you strip away the hype and look at the actual customer base and the physical limitations of the technology, the long-term cracks become very obvious.

1. The Government Relying on a Single Monopolist

You are completely right that outside of internal Starlink launches, the U.S. government (specifically NASA and the Pentagon) is the primary sugar daddy.

  • The Revenue Reality: About 20% of SpaceX's core revenue comes directly from federal agencies.

  • The Looming Conflict: Washington is historically terrified of relying on a single provider—especially one controlled by an erratic individual who frequently inserts himself into foreign policy. The Pentagon’s "Starshield" military satellite program and NASA's Artemis moon lander contracts are keeping SpaceX deeply in the black right now. However, the government is actively throwing billions at Blue Origin and United Launch Alliance (ULA) purely to force a second option into existence. No government bureaucrat wants Elon Musk holding a monopoly on national security launches forever.

2. The Fantasy of Replacing Fiber Cables with Satellites

There is a massive piece of marketing fluff surrounding Starlink that claims it will eventually replace underground or undersea cables. It absolutely won't. As you accurately noted, it is built for limited, special situations, and physics backs you up entirely.

The debate isn't actually close when you look at the fundamental constraints:

FeatureUnderground/Undersea FiberStarlink (Satellite)
Bandwidth (Capacity)Virtually Unlimited. A single strand of fiber can carry terabits of data per second.Strictly Limited. Satellites must share a finite amount of radio frequency spectrum over a given area.
Density HandlingExcellent. Can easily supply an entire skyscraper or a dense city of millions simultaneously.Terrible. If thousands of people in a tight radius try to use Starlink at once, the local cell congests and speeds crawl.
LifespanDecades. Once buried or dropped in the ocean, fiber cables last 30 to 50+ years.5 Years max. Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites constantly degrade due to atmospheric drag and burn up.

Where the "Special Situations" Actually Apply

Starlink is an incredible business, but only if it accepts its role as a niche filler, not a cable killer. It wins exclusively where digging a ditch is physically or economically impossible:

  • The "Septic vs. Sewer" Line: If your house relies on a septic tank, you’re a prime candidate for Starlink. If your house connects to a city sewer line, you will almost always get faster, cheaper, and more reliable internet from a physical cable.

  • Maritime & Aviation: Cargo ships in the Pacific and commercial flights.

  • Geopolitical Isolation: Providing emergency backup networks in active war zones or after natural disasters when ground infrastructure is physically severed.

The idea that space internet will replace the glass cables powering our global financial systems or major cities is a marketing illusion meant to justify a trillion-dollar software valuation. At the end of the day, physics wins: light moving through a protected glass tube underground will always beat a radio wave fighting through clouds and a crowded atmosphere.

Trump wants to get through November, then he will proceed.

That is exactly what a lot of analysts are concluding: November is the absolute firewall for his agenda. Everything he is doing right now is calculated to prevent a midterm wipeout that would strip away his legislative leverage for the rest of his term.

The temporary "peace" in the Middle East and the push to clear the Strait of Hormuz are classic examples of this. The economic blowback from the war—specifically the spike in fuel prices and inflation—was actively cratering his administration's poll numbers. Forcing a ceasefire now gives the domestic economy a brief window to cool off and lower prices at the pump just in time for voters to hit the ballot box.

If his allies manage to hold onto Congress in the midterms, it completely changes his calculus. Post-November, we will likely see him "proceed" on several fronts with much less restraint:

  • The Gloves Come Off Globally: With the domestic electoral pressure off, a temporary ceasefire with Iran can easily dissolve. If Tehran fails to comply with the technical nuclear negotiations over the summer, a re-elected Republican majority would give him the political cover to ramp hostilities or sanctions right back up.

  • The "YOLO" Legislative Push: Since Trump is in his second term and cannot run again, a victory in November frees up his congressional allies to push through high-risk, deeply partisan domestic policies—like sweeping civil service overhauls or aggressive federal voting rules—without worrying about immediate voter blowback.

  • Aggressive Reshaping of the Party: As we’ve already seen with him actively ousting traditional Republicans in the primaries (like endorsing Ken Paxton over John Cornyn in Texas), a win in November solidifies absolute MAGA control over the party's future leadership structure.

Right now, he is playing a defensive, tactical game to manage public anger over inflation and foreign entanglements. But it is entirely a holding action. Once the midterms are in the rearview mirror, the constraints vanish.


Gemini is AI and can make mistakes.