Amazon’s Leo has 242 satellites in orbit and plans to start rolling out its service to some customers this year.
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SpaceX’s IPO, which is gearing up to be one of largest-ever public listings, could ignite an explosion of other listings in its plume.
With so much enthusiasm for assets linked to the ever-expanding cosmos, it may be time for advisors to reach for the stars.
Potential initial public offerings from SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI will make big indexes even more concentrated.
NASA is teaming up with a host of private companies to build a lunar economy ready to welcome humans to the moon’s inhospitable surface.
The space agency also said Tuesday that it is planning to build a new nuclear-powered robotic spacecraft to launch to Mars by 2028.
The space race is on to build the biggest satellite internet network, and Amazon has some catching up to do.
Ron Baron, an early investor in Elon Musk’s aerospace tech company, launched funds to open up access to private investments.
Earlier this month, Tesla lost its title as the best-selling electric vehivle maker in the world to Chinese company BYD.
Artificial intelligence companies Anthropic and OpenAI have already taken early steps toward an IPO, The New York Times recently reported.
A logjam keeping companies worth as much as $2.9 trillion, from SpaceX to OpenAI, out of public stock markets may finally break in 2026.
Tesla’s sleek cars and futuristic trucks have defined Elon Musk’s public image, but SpaceX is the real engine behind his growing net worth.
SpaceX’s potential monster IPO would come after what’s been a remarkable rebound year for public listings.
Verizon and AST first announced a partnership last year, with the telco agreeing to invest $100 million in the satellite operator.
A $500 billion valuation would put Tether on par with OpenAI and SpaceX — not to mention dwarfing its next closest direct rival, Circle.
Just a week after Figma’s successful market debut, Firefly Aerospace saw its stock pop more than 34% after listing on the Nasdaq on Thursday.