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Been looking at some interesting financial data that just surfaced about how interconnected Elon Musk companies really are. Tesla's amended regulatory filing from 2024 revealed something pretty wild — the company racked up $573 million in cross-sales with SpaceX and xAI combined. That's a lot of internal commerce happening.
The breakdown is telling. xAI grabbed $430.1 million worth of Tesla's Megapack energy storage systems as they've been aggressively expanding data center capacity for their Grok AI operations. Meanwhile SpaceX was buying Cybertrucks — we're talking $143.3 million worth just in 2024. The SpaceX number actually got buried in Tesla's initial filing and only showed up in the amended version, which is why it caught people off guard.
What's interesting is how this ties into the bigger picture of what some are calling 'Elon Inc.' SpaceX just acquired xAI in February, basically merging aerospace, AI, and satellite infrastructure under one roof. Tesla meanwhile committed $2 billion in capital to both entities while also paying them for various services. It's this expanding web of strategic and financial integration across Elon Musk companies that's hard to ignore.
Naturally this has raised some eyebrows with shareholders. The concern isn't really about whether these deals make business sense — Megapack sales to xAI are legitimate, Cybertrucks to SpaceX help move inventory. The real question is whether Tesla's resources, talent, and tech are being channeled toward privately-held ventures that don't have the same public accountability. When one person is negotiating terms across multiple companies, there's inherent complexity around conflicts of interest.
Tesla's pushed back on this, pointing out the legitimate business rationale. And honestly, the fact that by February 2025 there was already another $78.1 million in new xAI revenue flowing through shows these aren't one-off transactions — this is an ongoing operating model. Whether you see it as efficient business architecture or something worth scrutinizing probably depends on your perspective on how Elon Musk companies should operate at scale.