Elon Musk crosses $800 billion net worth and sets $10 trillion as his next target
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Elon Musk's net worth crossed $800 billion this weekend, a figure that now equals approximately 2.7% of US GDP and represents a concentration of private wealth not seen since John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil era in 1913. Using World Bank 2024 data, the average GDP across 176 countries sits at approximately $612 billion, meaning Musk's personal wealth now exceeds the average size of a national economy. When pressed on the milestone, Musk responded with a $10 trillion target, a figure that would require his combined holdings to multiply more than twelvefold from current levels. The reply drew 1.3 million views within hours and reignited a debate about private wealth concentration that had been largely dormant since the Gilded Age comparisons began circulating earlier this year.
The bulk of Musk's wealth is distributed across Tesla, SpaceX, X combined with xAI, and various other ventures. SpaceX is now valued near $400 billion in secondary markets while remaining privately held, and both Tesla and SpaceX carry Bitcoin reserves on their balance sheets. Musk's father has additionally claimed the brothers hold more than 23,000 BTC valued at over $1.6 billion at current prices. The pathway to $10 trillion that supporters point to runs through autonomous taxi networks, Optimus humanoid robots, Starship cargo missions, and xAI data center buildout, with Tesla's market capitalization needing to reach levels that would rival the largest companies in market history. X is also expanding into financial services through X Money and in-feed crypto trading features in select US states, with Dogecoin integration signaled but not confirmed. Critics argue the $10 trillion target is theatrical given that Tesla already trades on aggressive growth assumptions, SpaceX faces increasing regulatory scrutiny on launch operations, and antitrust watchdogs are watching X's financial services expansion closely. Whether the target is achievable or not, the Rockefeller comparison has reframed the conversation around Musk's wealth from a technology story into a broader question about what limits, if any, exist on private wealth concentration in the modern American economy.
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He never sleeps
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His net worth exceeds the GDP of most countries and he's still replying to people on X at 2am