Future-ready technology companies are pouring capital into data centers and compute infrastructure – in 2026, the five biggest cloud companies will spend close to $700bn on data centers, chips, and networking. They are securing long-term energy contracts and even reopening nuclear facilities – Microsoft signed a 20-year contract to restart a nuclear reactor at Three Mile Island. And Microsoft isn’t alone. Amazon has agreed to procure more than five gigawatts of nuclear power from X-Energy, a Maryland-based startup small modular reactor developer, and Google signed a master agreement with Kairos Power for up to 500 megawatts of advanced small modular reactor capacity. Meta announced three separate nuclear deals in a single day, locking up as much as 6.6 gigawatts of new and existing clean energy by 2030 to feed Prometheus, its enormous AI campus rising out of Ohio farmland.
Future-ready automotive companies are building end-to-end systems, rather than relying on partners – that’s how Chinese EV manufacturer BYD was able to produce an SUV that floats across floodwater and a hypercar that hits 496 km/h – the fastest speed ever recorded for a production car. Tesla deployed a record 46.7 GWh of energy storage in 2025. Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Euisun Chung announced $21bn of further US investment, including a new steel mill in Louisiana. Toyota opened a $13.9bn battery plant in North Carolina. BYD is starting production at plants in Hungary, Brazil, Thailand, and Indonesia.
SpaceX is an extreme embodiment of this principle: nothing is outsourced. SpaceX doesn’t just design rockets; it builds them, tests them, recycles them, and launches them.
Within a few years of founding, SpaceX was making 70% of its rocket components in-house. A $120,000 actuator, no more complicated than a garage door opener, became less than a $5,000 build.
The rocket is not SpaceX’s advantage – it’s the system. Investors are not buying exposure to SpaceX’s products; they are underwriting a system of production – a tightly integrated stack of capabilities that includes design, manufacturing, launch, satellite production, and ultimately, service delivery through Starlink. It’s this system that allows SpaceX to move faster than its competitors. As Elon Musk put it to Tom Mueller, “If your hand is on a stove and it gets hot, you pull it right off. If it’s someone else’s hand on the stove, it will take you longer to do something.”
When every component is internal, feedback loops shorten, failures propagate instantly into design improvements, and knowledge compounds within the organization. In today’s world, the company that learns the fastest sets the pace of change.
SpaceX’s IPO provides the fuel required to scale a vertically integrated ecosystem strategy. Its significance is that it crystallizes a broader shift already underway. The market is now aggressively rewarding asset-heavy companies with high capital expense-to-sales ratios (see Chart 1) while heavily penalizing asset-light indices.