Why Elon Musk is Building Starship

Get 40% off your Vantage Plan from Ground News by visiting: https://groundnews.com/maxinomics SpaceX sells an empty chamber at the tip of a rocket, 17 feet across and 34 feet high. What goes inside it decides what the company is worth. A ton of someone else's cargo earns SpaceX $4 million, once. A ton of Starlink satellites earns $13 million over five years. A ton of AI chips could earn $50 million. That one number, return per ton, explains everything: why SpaceX launches its own satellites on three out of every four flights, why it looks more like a 19th century railroad than an airline, and why Starship is now the most important number in the company. Covered in this video: Falcon 9 launch economics, Starlink unit economics, the railroad land grants of the 1800s, why airlines became a cautionary tale, the shipping container revolution, AI data centers in orbit, and what Starship changes. Chapters 0:00 The Empty Chamber 0:40 Starlink’s Return per Ton 1:56 Sell the Seat or Own It 2:54 Why Launch Got Expensive 4:07 The Falcon 9 Flywheel 5:31 SpaceX Becomes Its Own Customer 6:59 The Railroad Parallel 9:41 The Airline Trap 12:13 AI Satellites and Value Creation 14:58 Starship and the Shipping Container of Space 17:36 Footnotes Follow Maxinomics on social: X: https://x.com/maxinomics Instagram:   / maxinomicsmb   TikTok:   / maxinomics   Producer: Phil Andrews (the guy in the videos and the comments) Video Editor: Sebastian Vega Motion Graphics: Seth Laupus & Tom Grillo Director of Production Services: Sam Wolf Thumbnail: Luca Depardon Franchise Content Producer: Tariq Abdellatif President, Morning Brew: Devin Emery