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Texas/IBNS-CMEDIA: In a milestone that has stunned financial markets and fascinated the internet, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has officially secured his long-anticipated $1 trillion pay package, backed by more than 75% of Tesla shareholders.
Even by Silicon Valley standards, this sum—a trillion dollars, twelve zeros long—is almost incomprehensible. To grasp its sheer magnitude, one must step beyond corporate valuations and think on a global scale. What could the world’s richest man actually buy with that kind of money? From entire national economies to every sports team on Earth, Musk’s historic Tesla pay package pushes the limits of imagination — the possibilities are mind-bending, and the comparisons are almost surreal. Buying entire countries (in theory)
While sovereign nations can’t technically be bought, Musk’s trillion-dollar package could, at least in theory, rival the size of entire national economies.
For instance, Switzerland’s GDP stands at $936.5 billion—meaning Musk could buy the equivalent of the Swiss economy and still have billions left over.
Alternatively, he could scoop up smaller but prosperous nations such as Singapore ($547.3 billion) and Israel ($540.3 billion)—two thriving economies for less than his trillion-dollar “budget.”
If Musk stretched just a bit beyond, he could even “purchase” economies like the Netherlands ($1.23 trillion) or Saudi Arabia ($1.24 trillion).A trillion-dollar takeover of big tech
Musk’s fortune might not buy Nvidia ($5 trillion), Apple, or Google, but it could make him a dominant force across the rest of the tech world.
After buying Twitter (now X), Musk could easily add to his empire by acquiring entire companies like Oracle, Tencent, Alibaba, Samsung Electronics, AMD, IBM, Uber, and Qualcomm, among others—and still have billions left over.
A trillion dollars in cash would make Musk the ultimate tech mogul, eclipsing even Silicon Valley’s most powerful executives.
Owning every major sports team in the world
The combined valuation of the four biggest U.S. sports leagues—the NFL, NBA, MLB, and NHL—comes to roughly $510 billion. Add in Europe’s top five football leagues (Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, Ligue 1) valued at another $193 billion, and you get around $700 billion total.
Even if Musk bought every single team across these leagues, he’d still have $300 billion left, enough to casually pick up the Indian Premier League’s 10 teams for just $2.5 billion.
In short, he could own every team, every player, every stadium—and still be one of the richest men alive.
A self-sustaining Mars colony
For Musk, space is the ultimate obsession. With $1 trillion, he could bankroll a significant chunk of humanity’s colonisation of Mars—his long-held dream.
According to SpaceX projections, transporting one million tonnes of cargo to Mars at $100,000 per tonne would cost $100 billion, just one-tenth of Musk’s new pay deal.
Establishing a fully self-sustaining city with one million inhabitants could cost $1 trillion to $10 trillion over several decades.
Even NASA’s most generous estimates put the figure at around $600 billion—comfortably within Musk’s new financial reach.
In short, with his trillion-dollar war chest, Musk could fund the first serious steps toward making humanity a multi-planetary species.
Hollywood, bought and paid for
The “Big Five” Hollywood studios—Disney ($210.7B), Sony ($168.5B), Comcast ($123.4B), Warner Bros Discovery ($55.5B), and Paramount Global ($16.2B)—collectively add up to $574 billion.
That means Musk could buy every single one of them, controlling global entertainment output, and still have $426 billion left.
Throw in Netflix ($465B), and he could quite literally own Hollywood and streaming’s biggest player—redefining global media ownership overnight.
Dominating the crypto world
The entire cryptocurrency market currently stands at around $3.4 trillion. Musk’s trillion-dollar payout represents nearly one-third of that.
He could, theoretically, buy up half of all bitcoins in circulation, or acquire nearly every other major cryptocurrency—Ethereum, Tether, XRP, and BNB—for about $849 billion, still leaving some spare change.
A trillion dollars gives Musk the power to sway digital finance itself, just as easily as he moves Tesla’s stock with a tweet.
Every home in San Diego
The entire San Diego housing market recently crossed the $1 trillion mark—meaning Musk could buy every house, condo, and apartment across the Californian city.
And after doing so, he’d still have his existing wealth—roughly $461 billion—to spare.
A private, nuclear-powered navy
A single Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier costs about $13 billion to build. With $1 trillion, Musk could commission 76 of them, surpassing the entire U.S. Navy’s current fleet of 11 active carriers.
In pure financial terms, Musk could command the largest, most advanced private navy ever imagined—and still have billions left for his next idea.
The entire gaming industry at his fingertips
A self-professed gamer, Musk could easily dominate the gaming world.
With his pay package, he could buy out Sony ($169.9B), Nintendo ($107.6B), Electronic Arts ($49.9B), and Take-Two Interactive ($46.5B)—the minds behind GTA, FIFA, and Zelda—for just $374 billion in total.
He’d still have nearly $700 billion left, perhaps to fund a real-life “Starfield” adventure to Mars.
Buying out the auto industry
If Musk fancied eliminating the competition, he could buy Toyota ($264.5B), BYD ($156.2B), Ferrari ($87.2B), GM ($64.2B), Volkswagen ($55.1B), BMW ($53.7B), Mercedes-Benz ($61.1B), Ford ($51.4B), and Honda ($40.9B)—for a total of around $956.8 billion.
He’d essentially own the global automotive industry—except Tesla, of course—and still have a few billion left over.
Coca-Cola for everyone on Earth
With Coca-Cola valued at $297 billion, Musk could buy the entire company and still have enough left to give a free bottle of Coke to every human on Earth.
That would cost him about $305 billion total, leaving nearly $700 billion for everything else—Mars, sports teams, or a personal fleet of rockets.
Rs 10,000 for every person alive
If Musk, for once, turned his focus to philanthropy, he could give $121 (Rs 10,000) to every single person on the planet.
Alternatively, if he focused only on the world’s 700 million people living in extreme poverty, each individual could receive $1,500 (Rs 1.33 lakh)—a life-changing sum in many parts of the world.

