Why Google stock may be the best way to invest in SpaceX, Anthropic

Why Google stock may be the best way to invest in SpaceX, Anthropic
Wajeeh Khan
12 June 2026, 13:16 PM

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GOOGL

Buy Alphabet (GOOGL). It owns ~6% of SpaceX and ~14% of Anthropic, plus it’s paying SpaceX for AI compute through June 2029—so Alphabet benefits both as a shareholder and as a customer. If SpaceX and Anthropic IPOs price high, Alphabet’s balance sheet gets a direct mark-up, and the market rerates GOOGL for “AI infrastructure + AI model” exposure in one liquid stock.

Key Risk: SpaceX/Anthropic IPOs come in far below expectations (or valuations reset), shrinking the mark-to-market gains and making the “backdoor” story look overpriced.

GOOG vs GOOGL

Buy GOOG (Class A) over GOOGL (Class C) only if you can get a meaningful discount; otherwise buy the cheaper of the two. The thesis is the same—Alphabet’s private-company stakes—but the market often prices the share classes differently. Any IPO-driven rerating should lift both; the class trading at a discount offers better upside per dollar.

Key Risk: Share-class discount persists or widens due to governance/liquidity preferences, offsetting the IPO-driven rerating.

  • Alphabet made a $900 million investment in SpaceX back in 2015.
  • Google has also invested more than $3 billion in Anthropic.
  • That makes GOOGL a unique way to play both SpaceX and Anthropic.

SpaceX, billionaire Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence (AI) and space infrastructure company, goes live on Nasdaq just hours from now – and Anthropic isn’t far behind either, having confidentially filed its S-1 at a valuation of nearly USD 1 trillion (approx. $1.5 trillion).

For investors seeking to ride these historic debuts but wary of their unpredictability and premium price tags, there’s a quieter, more grounded alternative sitting right in plain sight: Alphabet Inc, the parent company of Google, which holds meaningful stakes in both companies.

Why Google stock is your backdoor to SpaceX

Alphabet made a USD 900 million (approx. $1.3 billion) investment in SpaceX back in 2015, when the rocket company was valued at just USD 12 billion (approx. $17.5 billion), securing a near 7.5% stake.

That bet has aged extraordinarily well.

SpaceX has priced its IPO at $135 per share, commanding a valuation of roughly USD 1.8 trillion (approx. $2.6 trillion) – and Google currently owns just over 6% of it, according to the latest Alaska state filing.

The relationship runs deeper than equity.

Google agreed last week to pay SpaceX about USD 920 million (approx. $1.3 billion) per month for AI computing power through June 2029, a deal worth some USD 30 billion (approx. $43.7 billion) in total.

That means Alphabet’s money feeds SpaceX revenue either way – as a shareholder and as a client – creating uniquely layered exposure that no retail investor can easily replicate.

Why GOOGL shares are your backdoor into Anthropic

Alphabet’s position in Anthropic may be even more compelling. The company has invested more than USD 3 billion (approx. $4.4 billion) in Anthropic – a stake estimated at about 14%.

Anthropic’s annualized run-rate revenue has reached an estimated USD 44 billion (approx. $64.1 billion), and the company is on track to post its first-ever operating profit – some USD 559 million (approx. $814.6 million) – for the second quarter.

The AI research lab recently filed its S-1 confidentially with the SEC at a valuation of about USD 965 billion (approx. $1.4 trillion), with the potential to debut at a valuation above USD 1 trillion (approx. $1.5 trillion).

For Google shareholders, this isn’t just a passive bet; it’s a strategic alignment.

Anthropic’s Claude AI competes and collaborates within Alphabet’s ecosystem – and a successful IPO would crystallize enormous paper gains for the giant’s balance sheet, potentially unlocking value that the market has yet to fully price in.

Wall Street remains bullish on Alphabet Inc

At current IPO valuations, Alphabet’s combined stakes in SpaceX and Anthropic are estimated to be worth roughly USD 243 billion (approx. $354.1 billion).

For investors who want exposure to the two most talked-about IPOs of this generation, without the volatility of chasing freshly listed shares, Alphabet offers something rare – a world-class business that already works, wrapped around two of the most valuable private companies on the planet.

Wall Street currently has a consensus “Strong Buy” rating on GOOGL stock, with the mean price target of $433 indicating potential upside of more than 22% from here.