As SpaceX moves toward its monumental $1.75 trillion IPO this summer, the company has issued a stern warning to investors regarding the stability of the global chip supply chain. In its S-1 registration filing (disclosed on April 22-23, 2026), SpaceX revealed an ambitious and highly capital-intensive pivot: manufacturing its own in-house GPUs.
This “chip sovereignty” strategy is designed to decouple SpaceX and its integrated AI partner, xAI, from their dependence on third-party giants like Nvidia.
1. The “Chip Crisis” Warning
SpaceXโs filing highlights a critical vulnerability in its current growth trajectory: a lack of secured, long-term compute resources.
- No Long-Term Contracts: The company explicitly stated that it does not have long-term contracts with many of its direct chip suppliers, leaving it exposed to price spikes and shortages.
- Supply as a Growth Bottleneck: SpaceX identified chip supply constraints as a primary “operational and financial risk” that could stall its expansion into Orbital AI Data Centers.
- Third-Party Reliance: Despite the in-house push, the company admitted it will continue to source a “significant portion” of its hardware externally for the foreseeable future.
2. The Solution: In-House GPUs & “Terafab”
The plan to build custom GPUs is the centerpiece of “Terafab”โa massive, joint-venture chip manufacturing complex in Austin, Texas, involving SpaceX, Tesla, xAI, and Intel.
- Vertical Integration: Muskโs goal is a “domestic closed loop,” handling every stage from chip design and logic to memory and advanced packaging under one roof.
- Intel 14A Process: Elon Musk confirmed to analysts that the project intends to utilize Intelโs next-generation 14A manufacturing process, which he expects to be “prime time ready” by the time Terafab scales.
- 1-Terawatt Vision: The eventual goal for Terafab is a staggering 1 terawatt (TW) of compute output annuallyโroughly 20 times the global AI computing capacity of 2024.
3. Strategic Objective: The Orbital Loop
The push for custom silicon isn’t just about cost; it’s about the unique engineering requirements of space-based AI.
- Orbital Inference: Custom GPUs will be optimized for the Orbital Data Center strategy, where AI models are deployed on a constellation of over 1 million satellites to bypass terrestrial power grid and cooling constraints.
- Radiation Hardening: In-house design allows SpaceX to build chips specifically hardened against the harsh radiation environment of Low Earth Orbit (LEO), a feature standard commercial GPUs lack.
- xAI Synergy: The custom silicon will power Grok and other agentic models, providing a hardware advantage tailored specifically to xAIโs software architecture.
4. Risks: The “Financial Black Hole”
Analysts at Barclays and others have warned that this move represents the single biggest risk to SpaceX’s IPO valuation.
| Risk Factor | Impact on SpaceX |
| Massive Capex | Adds tens of billions to a company already in a “loss-making” phase post-xAI merger. |
| Yield Rate Uncertainty | Relying on Intel’s unproven 14A process could lead to high failure rates and delays. |
| Nvidia Counter-Response | Rapid innovation from incumbents could make SpaceXโs in-house chips obsolete before they hit “prime time.” |
| Valuation Premium | The $1.75T price tag already prices in “flawless execution” through 2030; any delay in Terafab could trigger a re-rating. |


