Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks during the unveiling of the new Tesla Model Y in Hawthorne, California on March 14, 2019.

It may be happenstance but it also wouldn't be extraordinary for a company of scientists and rocket engineers, nor the first time Elon Musk pinned a financial figure to a number of cultural significance.

SpaceX is looking to raise $314.15 million in its most recent round of fundraising, CNBC reported on Thursday.

Those five digits are also the beginning of the mathematical constant "pi," or 3.1415. What's more, the recent SpaceX round includes new investor Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, another studious group.

But SpaceX told CNBC on Friday that this was just a coincidence, so it appears the result was not planned by Musk or a cheeky member of his company's finance department.

This wouldn't be the first time that a massive technology company used pi as a basis for its investments. Google, when buying patents at an auction in 2011, reportedly used mathematical constants as it raised its bid from $1.9021 billion (Brun's constant) to $2.6149 (Meissel-Mertens constant) to $3.1415 billion (pi).

Musk last August infamously said in a tweet that he would be taking Tesla private at $420 a share, a number which the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) later alleged he picked "because of the significance of that number in marijuana culture." Musk and the SEC later settled the regulator's fraud lawsuit, which saw him give up his title as Tesla chairman and pay a $20 million penalty.

Because the SpaceX round was priced at $214 a share, the number does not go beyond five digits of pi, as the total amount SpaceX is seeking is $314,152,000.00 (whereas pi to 11 digits is 3.1415926535). If SpaceX had really tried to nail pi on the head, the company would have had to price the round at $214.0049491485014 a share.