Business
Elon Musk Builds a $1.25 Trillion Giant as SpaceX Buys xAI in Landmark Merger
The billionaire ties together rockets and AI, forming the highest-valued private company, with an IPO now front and center
HUSTON, Texas – Elon Musk said Monday that SpaceX is acquiring his AI startup, xAI, in an all-stock deal that puts the combined company at $1.25 trillion. The announcement rippled across tech and finance, since it creates what appears to be the most valuable private company ever. Musk called it “the most ambitious, vertically-integrated innovation engine on (and off) Earth.”
Based on the terms shared, the merger pegs SpaceX at about $1 trillion, up from recent secondary market estimates near $800 billion. It values xAI at $250 billion, a bit above its January 2026 funding round, when it raised $20 billion. xAI investors will receive SpaceX shares through an exchange ratio that converts their holdings into stock of the new combined company. Reports citing banking materials and people familiar with the documents put the implied price at roughly $527 per share.
By size alone, this is the biggest merger ever reported. It lands just months after xAI’s rapid rise, driven by its Grok chatbot lineup and big spending on compute, including the Colossus supercluster. SpaceX, at the same time, continues to lead commercial space with reusable Falcon rockets, ongoing Starship work, and the growing Starlink satellite internet network, now used by millions worldwide.
A deliberate link between AI and space
In a memo posted to SpaceX’s website, Musk framed the acquisition as a logical step for two companies he already treats as connected. “This marks not just the next chapter, but the next book in SpaceX and xAI’s mission: scaling to make a sentient sun to understand the Universe and extend the light of consciousness to the stars!” he wrote. He also pointed to practical overlap, including using Starlink for low-latency data movement that can support AI training and inference.
The merger also puts fresh attention on Musk’s long-running idea of data centers in orbit. With xAI’s model work combined with SpaceX launch capacity and space hardware, the new company could place large compute systems in space. Supporters say that could help with Earth-based limits like power use and land needs for giant AI clusters. Analysts have floated the idea that this approach could strengthen Musk’s hand versus rivals such as OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Anthropic.
This deal also follows earlier consolidation across Musk’s companies. In 2025, xAI bought the social platform X (formerly Twitter) in a separate stock swap, giving xAI access to a huge stream of real-time posts and conversations that can feed Grok training. With SpaceX now taking in xAI, the structure pulls rockets, satellites, social media, and advanced AI into one company. Some watchers have started calling it the “Muskonomy,” now fully assembled.
Market buzz and worries from some investors
The reaction was quick. On Tuesday, shares of public space-related firms moved higher, as investors priced in more momentum for the sector. Still, the news didn’t land the same way for everyone. Some SpaceX minority holders raised concerns that SpaceX may be rescuing a high-spend AI company. Reports say xAI has been burning about $1 billion per month. Those critics also point to dilution, since SpaceX is issuing stock to complete the purchase, right before a possible public listing.
Multiple reports say SpaceX is preparing for an initial public offering as soon as June 2026. If that happens, the post-merger company could price above $1.25 trillion, with talk reaching $1.5 trillion or higher. A listing on that scale would rank among the largest IPOs ever and put the company in the same market-cap conversation as Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia.
Musk’s personal net worth could climb sharply on paper as well. He reportedly holds about 43% of SpaceX, which now includes xAI. That stake boosts his position as the value of the combined business rises, especially as Tesla’s market cap sits around $1.58 trillion. The SpaceX-xAI combination now looks like a serious challenger in the private-to-public storyline.
Big promises, big execution risk
The upside is clear, but so are the headaches. A company that spans space launch, satellite internet, AI models, and social media is likely to draw more regulatory attention. Expect closer review around competition, data access, and how much influence one owner has across several key industries.
There’s also the basic work of combining two intense cultures. xAI has scaled fast, powered by heavy spending on chips and data centers. SpaceX runs on tight engineering discipline and mission schedules. Bringing those priorities under one roof will test management, timelines, and focus.
Supporters see the deal as a direct expression of Musk’s long-term plan: use AI to speed up space progress, and use space infrastructure to push AI forward. As one industry insider put it, “If anyone can make space-based AI a reality, it’s the man who’s already revolutionized rockets and electric cars.”
Now that the merger is out in the open, attention turns to what comes next. If the IPO arrives this summer, it could reset expectations for how private giants enter public markets, and it could lock in Musk’s boldest corporate structure yet.
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Business
Trump Tariff Revenue Jumps 300% as Supreme Court Fight Nears
Trump Tariff Windfall: Customs Revenue Jumps About 300% as Supreme Court Fight Nears
Tariff revenue hits $124 billion so far this fiscal year, with January collections at $30.4 billion, fueling talk of debt payoff and direct checks
WASHINGTON, D.C. – President Donald Trump’s tariff push is driving a major spike in federal customs revenue. New Treasury Department figures show customs duties are up about 300 percent since Trump returned to office. In January, the US brought in about $30.4 billion from customs duties. As a result, the fiscal year-to-date total sits near $124 billion, up roughly 304 percent from the same period a year earlier.
The administration is using those numbers to back a central claim: tariffs can raise money without raising US income taxes. Trump has also said the new tariff revenue can help chip away at the $38 trillion national debt. At the same time, he argues that the duties shield US industries from unfair competition abroad.
The jump in revenue follows a set of broad tariff moves that began in early 2025. First, the White House rolled out across-the-board duties on many imports starting in April 2025. Next came “reciprocal” tariffs aimed at certain countries. The administration tied these actions to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), citing national emergencies tied to issues such as fentanyl trafficking and trade imbalances.
Collections started rising fast. Monthly totals moved from about $9.6 billion in March 2025 to more than $23.9 billion later that year. That run-up set the stage for the big fiscal 2026 numbers now being reported.
Looking back, fiscal 2025 (which ended September 30, 2025) produced $215.2 billion in customs duties, more than twice the prior year. So far, fiscal 2026 is moving even faster. In addition, the early deficit picture looks better. The federal budget deficit fell 17 percent in the first four months of fiscal 2026 (or 21 percent after calendar adjustments), as revenue grew more quickly than spending.
A core part of Trump’s economic pitch
Trump has cast the rising customs revenue as proof that his trade strategy works. In posts and public remarks, he has said other countries end up paying because tariffs reduce their export edge, while the US collects the money. Supporters inside and outside the administration point to the monthly totals as evidence that the policy is producing real cash for the Treasury.
That revenue talk has also revived a big idea: direct $2,000 payments to Americans. Trump has described the plan as a “tariff dividend” aimed at lower- and middle-income households. He has said the money would come from the “hundreds of billions” flowing in through customs duties. In comments from November 2025, he said he was taking the idea seriously and still supported it. Even so, no bill or detailed framework has been released. Because of that, the proposal has drawn both attention and doubts, including concerns about how to target payments fairly.
Many economists and trade researchers argue that tariffs act like a tax on US importers, and those costs often show up in higher prices. Research cited from the New York Federal Reserve suggests US firms and households cover most of the bill, as much as 90 percent in some estimates.
Some analyses put the added cost at about $1,000 per household in 2025. Projections rise to around $1,300 in 2026 if the policy stays the same. Over time, tariffs could bring in large gross revenue, but critics say the net gain shrinks once you factor in slower growth, job losses in exposed industries, and possible retaliation from trading partners.
Supreme Court decision could change everything.
The revenue boom is unfolding while the tariff program faces heavy legal pressure. The Supreme Court is expected to rule on whether Trump can use IEEPA to impose broad tariffs without Congress. The court heard oral arguments in November 2025 in cases that challenge the scope of that authority, since Congress normally controls tariff policy.
Lower courts have already pushed back. The US Court of International Trade and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against key parts of the tariff structure, saying the measures go beyond what the statute allows.
Meanwhile, importers have filed hundreds of refund suits. If the Supreme Court sides with challengers, the federal government could owe tens of billions, or even more, in returned duties. That outcome would cut into the revenue totals and could force the White House to rely on other trade laws.
For now, administration officials say they expect to win. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has called an adverse ruling “very unlikely.” Still, the wait has stretched longer than many expected. That has added stress for importers dealing with compliance demands and growing bond requirements. US Customs data also shows record importer bond shortfalls, totaling nearly $3.6 billion in fiscal 2025, which highlights the strain tied to the policy.
What it means for trade and the economy
Trump’s tariff strategy has shifted global trade talks. Negotiations continue as some countries push for lower rates while the US keeps pressure on issues like intellectual property theft and currency practices. Supporters say tariffs are helping bring investment home, open factories, and boost jobs in protected sectors.
On the other hand, critics warn about higher prices, supply chain headaches, and risks to industries that depend on exports, including agriculture and manufacturing, if retaliation grows.
As fiscal 2026 continues, tariff revenue will stay at the center of budget and trade arguments. The big unknown is whether the surge holds up, or whether a Supreme Court ruling forces a reset. For now, the numbers are clear: customs duties are pouring in at a pace that is reshaping the budget debate and fueling bold ideas on debt reduction and direct payments.
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Business
Tech Titans Flee California to Low-Tax Havens Like Florida
California’s Wealth Drain: Billionaires Leave as Taxes Climb and Debt Grows
Tech Leaders Head to Low-Tax States Like Florida
Mark Zuckerberg’s $150M+ Miami Mansion Buy Points to a Bigger Shift Among Silicon Valley’s Rich
LOS ANGELES – A high-profile real estate deal is adding fuel to the talk of money leaving California. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has reportedly bought a waterfront estate on Miami’s Indian Creek Island, the guarded enclave often called the “Billionaire Bunker,” for an estimated $150 million to $200 million.
Sources familiar with the deal, widely reported in February 2026, say the purchase puts him near neighbors like Jeff Bezos and Ivanka Trump. People close to the situation also suggest it’s more than a second home, with Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, planning to settle in by April. For many observers, it looks like another major tech name is choosing to leave California as new tax proposals stir concern.
Zuckerberg’s reported move fits into a bigger story, a capital exodus tied to California’s high tax burden and a new ballot push that critics say could speed up departures. The proposal is called the 2026 California Billionaire Tax Act. It would place a one-time 5% tax on the net worth of residents over $1 billion, paid over five years (about 1% per year).
Supporters, including groups such as the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West, say it could raise tens of billions for health care as federal support shrinks. Opponents, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, warn it could damage a tax system that already depends heavily on a small group of top earners.
California Facing Ongoing Outmigration
California already has one of the toughest tax setups in the country. The top state income tax rate is 13.3%, the highest in the U.S. In many cases, the state doesn’t separate regular income and capital gains. When federal taxes are added, the bill can be steep. The state also relies heavily on the top 1% of earners, who pay roughly half of all personal income tax revenue.
With the proposed wealth tax set to apply to people who are residents as of January 1, 2026, some wealthy residents appear to be moving early. Entrepreneurs like Chamath Palihapitiya and David Friedberg have cited estimates that $1 trillion to $2.5 trillion in assets left the state in late 2025 and early 2026. Private polling has also suggested that 80% to 90% of those affected have already moved or plan to if the measure moves forward.
This isn’t only about billionaires. California has faced ongoing outmigration tied to taxes, regulations, homelessness, and the high cost of living. U.S. Census data shows net domestic losses of more than one million residents from 2020 to 2024.
Higher earners, especially those making over $200,000, tend to be the most likely to leave. Many head to states with no state income tax, including Florida, Texas, and Nevada. The effects can stack up fast: less income tax revenue, weaker sales and property tax collections, fewer big donations, and risks to jobs linked to businesses and investors that relocate.
California Lawmakers Target the Wealthy
California’s budget problems sit in the middle of this debate. The state moved from a record $97.5 billion surplus in 2022 to recurring deficits. Current projections point to an $18 billion gap that could reach $35 billion by 2028.
A major issue is how dependent the state is on income and capital gains taxes from top earners, which rise and fall with markets and can shrink when people move. Critics blame years of Democratic-led spending, pointing to expanded programs, health care growth, and environmental rules they say raised long-term costs without steady revenue to match.
Many Democratic lawmakers and progressive groups have responded to the budget strain by pushing for higher taxes on the rich. If the billionaire tax qualifies for the November 2026 ballot, it would need nearly 875,000 signatures. Backers say it would apply to about 200 ultra-wealthy residents with a combined net worth above $2 trillion.
Supporters frame it as a fairness issue, arguing billionaires can face lower effective rates because much of their wealth is tied to unrealized gains. The push has sparked strong pushback, with economists warning it could trigger even more departures. Recent examples often mentioned include Google co-founder Larry Page (reported to have bought Miami property), PayPal’s Peter Thiel, and other major names who have set up residency outside California.
Even if the wealth tax never passes, the threat of it can change behavior. Florida, with no state income tax, offers a clear financial draw. For celebrities and executives, it also offers privacy and security. Indian Creek, with gates, its own police, and marine patrols, is part of the appeal for people who want distance from public attention.
Wave of Billionaire Relocations
The bigger concern for California is what happens if this pattern continues. When investors and founders leave, Silicon Valley’s funding networks and job creation can weaken over time. People who want tighter budgets argue that constant tax hikes on the rich backfire, pushing out the very people the state relies on, then shifting pressure onto everyone else through higher costs and fewer services.
Supporters of progressive tax policy say top earners benefit greatly from California’s system and should pay more, and they often argue that claims of mass migration are overstated based on past research showing limited millionaire movement.
Still, the trend line is hard to ignore. From Oracle’s headquarters move years ago to the latest wave of billionaire relocations, California is competing with states that make it easier to keep more of your income. In a country where people and money can move quickly, that competition matters.
If Zuckerberg is settling into Florida life, the signal is clear. With high taxes and growing debt fears, even leaders tied to California’s tech boom are choosing to leave. California now faces a tough choice: adjust its approach, or keep losing the wealth that has long helped fund the state.
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Business
Trump Takes Aim at China’s Critical Minerals Control With Project Vault
Trump Targets China’s Critical Minerals Dominance with Bold ‘Project Vault’ Stockpile and Strategic U.S.-India Trade Framework
Washington’s Aggressive Push to Reshape Global Supply Chains Amid Rising Geopolitical Tensions
WASHINGTON, D.C. – President Donald Trump has stepped up his push this month to reduce China’s hold over critical minerals, the raw materials used in electric vehicles, smartphones, advanced weapons systems, and many AI-related tools.
China controls about 70% of global rare earth mining and as much as 90% of processing. The Trump administration says that kind of control puts the United States at risk, especially after Beijing used export limits and pricing pressure to sway markets.
At the center of the plan is Project Vault, a nearly $12 billion strategic stockpile announced on February 2, 2026. It’s backed by a $10 billion loan from the U.S. Export-Import Bank, plus $2 billion from private investors.
The goal is to build reserves of minerals such as rare earths, lithium, cobalt, and nickel. The White House says the stockpile will help protect U.S. manufacturers from supply disruptions, calm price swings, and support more mining and processing at home.
Critical Minerals Ministerial
“American businesses have risked running out of critical minerals during market disruptions,” Trump said during the Oval Office event. “Project Vault keeps our workers and industries from getting hit by shortages.” The announcement followed China’s recent limits on rare earth magnets, which rattled supplies tied to semiconductors, drones, and electric vehicles.
Two days later, the administration brought together the first Critical Minerals Ministerial on February 4, with officials from 54 countries. Attendees included India, Japan, Australia, the United Kingdom, and several resource-rich nations in Africa and Latin America.
Vice President JD Vance promoted the idea of a preferred trade group among allies. The proposal included enforceable price floors, shared stockpiles, and tariffs meant to counter China’s practice of driving prices down by flooding markets with cheaper supply.
Alongside the meeting, the U.S. signed 11 new bilateral frameworks and memorandums of understanding (MOUs). Partners included Argentina, Peru, the Philippines, the United Arab Emirates, and Uzbekistan. The agreements focus on joint projects, pricing guardrails, access to financing, and expanding refining and processing capacity, areas where China still holds the upper hand.
One of the biggest headlines is a growing U.S.-India partnership. An interim trade framework released February 6 sets the tone, with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer calling it a deal that opens “one of the largest economies in the world for American workers.” It includes two-way tariff changes and supply chain commitments meant to reduce dependence on China.
Building US Supply Chains
Under the framework, India would cut or remove tariffs on a wide range of U.S. industrial products and farm goods, including dried distillers’ grains, soybean oil, tree nuts, and wine. In return, the U.S. would impose an 18% reciprocal tariff on certain Indian exports such as textiles, apparel, leather, and machinery, while lifting tariffs on others, including generic drugs, gems, and aircraft parts.
India also agreed to buy $500 billion in U.S. goods over five years. The list includes energy (oil and gas), coking coal, aircraft, precious metals, and tech items such as graphics processing units used in AI and data centers.
The framework is not limited to minerals, but it fits the broader goal of building supply chains less exposed to China. India took part in the ministerial talks and has also explored related arrangements with countries like Brazil and Canada.
Many analysts see this as a shift in geopolitics. By signaling support for a U.S.-led minerals group, India shows it shares Washington’s interest in cutting reliance on Beijing. That matters as New Delhi works to expand its own mining and processing base. The interim agreement also supports a longer-term U.S.-India trade deal that began taking shape in 2025 under Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The administration is also using executive action. A January 2026 order on imports of processed critical minerals puts more weight on negotiations with other countries. It also raises the possibility of tariffs or import limits if partners do not cooperate. These steps build on earlier work, including updates to U.S. critical minerals lists and new incentives tied to domestic production.
U.S.-China Tensions
Skeptics question whether the strategy can hold up over time, pointing to past policy swings and China’s deep lead in infrastructure and processing know-how. Backers say the mix of stockpiles, allied trade rules, and country-by-country deals marks the strongest U.S. push yet on minerals policy.
With U.S.-China tensions still high, the White House is framing these moves as part of an “America First” push to secure materials tied to economic strength and defense readiness. Billions of dollars are now in motion, and more countries are lining up behind new rules. The administration says it wants to do more than compete; it wants to break China’s grip on the materials that will shape the next few decades.
The next several months will show whether these announcements turn into real mines, refineries, and supply contracts that lower risk for the U.S. industry. For now, Trump’s latest actions have redrawn lines in the global critical minerals fight, with allies coordinating more closely and China facing a more organized challenge.
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