Satellites
•33 stocks
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All Stocks (33)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
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AMZN
Amazon.com, Inc.
Project Kuiper satellite constellation for global broadband connectivity.
|
$2.35T |
$226.68
+2.71%
|
|
BA
The Boeing Company
Satellites: Boeing builds and operates satellites and related space systems.
|
$135.88B |
$177.96
-0.97%
|
|
NOC
Northrop Grumman Corporation
The company develops and operates satellites as part of its Space Systems portfolio.
|
$81.14B |
$563.34
-0.59%
|
|
LHX
L3Harris Technologies, Inc.
L3Harris develops and operates satellites including space-based missile warning/tracking (HPTSS).
|
$51.97B |
$274.15
-1.30%
|
|
CHT
Chunghwa Telecom Co., Ltd.
CHT leverages multi-orbit satellites as part of its global connectivity strategy.
|
$32.47B |
$41.69
-0.42%
|
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LDOS
Leidos Holdings, Inc.
Leidos engages in satellite-related capabilities and ground-segment work as part of its space portfolio.
|
$23.93B |
$187.11
+0.33%
|
|
TDY
Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
The company references space hardware and detectors, and showcased satellite-related innovations (e.g., LEO power/space imaging components), indicating direct involvement in satellites.
|
$23.20B |
$491.05
-0.77%
|
|
SATS
EchoStar Corporation
EchoStar directly operates satellites to provide broadband and communications services (e.g., Jupiter 3).
|
$19.75B |
$70.14
+2.21%
|
|
RKLB
Rocket Lab USA, Inc.
Rocket Lab directly designs, builds, and operates satellites as a core product line through its Space Systems and launch programs.
|
$19.32B |
$42.03
+4.29%
|
|
ASTS
AST SpaceMobile, Inc.
AST SpaceMobile is building and deploying satellites (BlueBirds) to create a space-based cellular broadband constellation.
|
$18.42B |
$54.28
+5.66%
|
|
HII
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc.
Satellites captures HII's involvement in space domain capabilities and related systems.
|
$11.99B |
$310.17
+1.53%
|
|
KTOS
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions, Inc.
Involvement in satellites and space assets through OpenSpace and related ground-system capabilities.
|
$11.67B |
$73.80
+6.74%
|
|
GSAT
Globalstar, Inc.
Globalstar directly operates a Low Earth Orbit satellite constellation and provides mobile satellite services, making 'Satellites' a core product category.
|
$7.20B |
$60.54
+6.58%
|
|
AMTM
Amentum Holdings, Inc.
Satellites development and operation capability aligns with AMTM's space and comms initiatives.
|
$5.90B |
$24.96
+2.89%
|
|
VSAT
Viasat, Inc.
ViaSat-3 constellation and satellite assets directly enable satellite-based connectivity and services.
|
$4.07B |
$31.82
+4.86%
|
|
PL
Planet Labs PBC
Planet operates and licenses imagery from a large fleet of Earth-observation satellites, forming its core data product.
|
$3.39B |
$11.45
+2.55%
|
|
SXI
Standex International Corporation
Exposure to satellites market and related space technology applications.
|
$2.77B |
$233.02
+1.62%
|
|
IRDM
Iridium Communications Inc.
Iridium operates a 66-satellite LEO constellation, which is the core asset enabling its services.
|
$1.70B |
$16.22
+1.06%
|
|
VVX
V2X, Inc.
Involvement with satellites and space assets, including Space Force contracts.
|
$1.66B |
$52.80
+1.03%
|
|
LUNR
Intuitive Machines, Inc.
Intuitive Machines develops and operates satellites for lunar data relay and imagery, including the NSNS constellation.
|
$1.54B |
$8.89
+3.19%
|
|
RDW
Redwire Corporation
Redwire directly develops and provides satellites and related spacecraft platforms, fitting the 'Satellites' category.
|
$763.41M |
$5.38
+1.51%
|
|
BKSY
BlackSky Technology Inc.
BlackSky's core offering is its Gen-3 satellite constellation delivering imagery data.
|
$543.67M |
$15.90
+3.72%
|
|
TSAT
Telesat Corporation
Directly operates satellites for communications; core product category is satellites.
|
$333.74M |
$24.57
+3.41%
|
|
FEIM
Frequency Electronics, Inc.
FEIM provides satellites-related hardware and timing systems used on satellite platforms.
|
$267.81M |
$27.03
-1.82%
|
|
SPIR
Spire Global, Inc.
Spire designs, builds, and operates its nanosatellite constellation as the core product offering.
|
$250.57M |
$7.87
+2.34%
|
|
SATL
Satellogic Inc.
Satellites - Satellogic's core product is designing, manufacturing, and operating satellites.
|
$143.57M |
$1.46
+6.99%
|
|
LAES
SEALSQ Corp
SEALSQ participates in a secure satellite constellation (WISeSat) to enable post-quantum secure communications, aligning with Satellites.
|
$105.99M |
$4.17
+10.74%
|
|
KULR
KULR Technology Group, Inc.
KULR ONE Space targets cubesats/smallsats, aligning with satellites as a product domain.
|
$94.14M |
$2.40
+4.59%
|
|
NUKK
Nukkleus Inc.
Star's defense-focused platforms include satellite-related capabilities, aligning with the Satellites category.
|
$30.55M |
$5.34
+23.73%
|
|
MOBX
Mobix Labs, Inc.
Satellites as a broader space/defense-related product/technology area touched by the company.
|
$24.50M |
$0.44
-4.55%
|
|
SIDU
Sidus Space, Inc.
Sidus's LizzieSat is a modular satellite platform designed, manufactured and operated by the company.
|
$18.92M |
$0.75
+0.42%
|
|
MNTS
Momentus Inc.
Momentus directly builds and deploys satellite buses and OSVs, and provides hosted payload services for satellites, aligning with the 'Satellites' investable theme.
|
$7.14M |
$0.62
+1.01%
|
|
HLEO
Helio Corporation
Contributed radar antennas for Europa Clipper and CubeSat antennas, aligning with satellite hardware capabilities.
|
$1.14M |
$0.10
|
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# Executive Summary
* The satellite industry is undergoing a transformation driven by the rapid build-out of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellations, with direct-to-device (D2D) connectivity poised to unlock a mass-market revenue stream starting in 2026.
* Heightened geopolitical tensions are fueling a surge in defense spending, creating a strong, non-cyclical demand tailwind for companies providing secure communications and advanced intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities.
* Artificial intelligence is becoming a key differentiator, enabling companies to convert vast amounts of satellite data into high-margin, subscription-based analytics and insights, shifting business models from data provision to "answers-as-a-service."
* A clear financial divergence exists between profitable, established defense players, such as L3Harris, and high-growth but cash-intensive "New Space" companies, like Rocket Lab and AST SpaceMobile, that are investing heavily in constellation deployment.
* The proliferation of LEO satellites creates significant long-term risks from space debris, increasing operational costs and threatening the sustainability of the orbital environment.
* The competitive landscape is defined by distinct strategies: established defense primes, vertically integrated end-to-end providers, specialized technology pure-plays, and data analytics leaders.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The satellite industry's growth trajectory is being reshaped by the massive build-out of LEO constellations and the advent of direct-to-device (D2D) connectivity. The LEO market is forecast to more than double to $34.33 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 13.28%, with as many as 70,000 new satellites expected to launch in the next five years. This trend is unlocking the multi-billion dollar D2D market, which connects satellites directly to standard smartphones, fundamentally changing the industry's addressable market from a niche to a mass-consumer base. Pure-plays like AST SpaceMobile are leading this charge, with commercial services partnered with global Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) slated to begin in 2026. The FCC's expected waiver for SpaceX in Q1 2025 will further accelerate the rollout of these services, solidifying this as the industry's primary growth engine for the next 3-5 years.
A strong secondary tailwind comes from rising geopolitical tensions, which have boosted defense budgets and accelerated the adoption of commercial satellite technology for national security. The DoD's 11.8% budget increase for FY26 is fueling demand for advanced intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) and resilient communications. This demand is increasingly for AI-powered analytics, not just raw imagery, allowing companies like Planet Labs to leverage their AI platforms to win high-value government contracts and deliver actionable intelligence.
The largest commercial opportunity lies in monetizing D2D services through wholesale partnerships with the world's largest telecommunication companies. The primary risk is twofold: the immense capital expenditure required for constellation build-out creates significant financial risk for pre-revenue companies, while the resulting orbital congestion from space debris poses a systemic threat to all LEO operators. Supply chain constraints, evidenced by program delays at firms like Redwire, which saw a -21% YoY revenue decline in Q2 2025 due to an unfavorable Estimate at Completion (EAC) adjustment on a fixed-price development program, add further execution risk.
## Competitive Landscape
The satellite market is characterized by ongoing consolidation among established players, such as the Viasat-Inmarsat and SES-Intelsat mergers, while simultaneously witnessing a surge of specialized new entrants. This dynamic environment fosters diverse competitive strategies.
One prevalent approach is that of the diversified defense and space prime, which leverages deep, long-standing government relationships and a vast technology portfolio to deliver end-to-end, high-margin systems for national security. Companies employing this strategy benefit from stable, predictable revenue from long-term government contracts and high barriers to entry due to security clearances and technological complexity. L3Harris, for instance, operates as a "Trusted Disruptor" for the DoD, evidenced by its 1.2x book-to-bill ratio in Q3 2025 and its leadership in critical systems like the Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor (HBTSS) satellite, the only proven on-orbit system for tracking hypersonic missiles.
Another strategy is that of the vertically integrated end-to-end provider, which aims to control every aspect of the value chain—from component manufacturing and satellite design to launch services—to reduce costs, accelerate innovation, and mitigate supply chain risks. This approach offers greater control over schedule and quality, along with the potential for lower unit costs at scale. Rocket Lab exemplifies this strategy in the New Space sector, with its in-house production of engines, satellite buses, and components, combined with its own launch vehicles like Electron and the developing Neutron rocket.
A third model involves specialized technology pure-plays, which focus on developing a single, disruptive technology to solve a major market problem, often with a wholesale or partnership-based business model. These companies aim for a deep technical moat and extensive intellectual property portfolio. AST SpaceMobile's entire strategy rests on its unique large-phased array antennas and custom AST5000 ASIC chips to deliver cellular broadband directly to unmodified smartphones, a singular focus that differentiates it from competitors and is supported by partnerships with global MNOs for commercial service slated for 2026.
Finally, the data and analytics as a service model involves deploying a proprietary satellite constellation to generate a unique dataset, then using AI and software platforms to sell high-margin, recurring-revenue insights and analytics rather than commoditized data. This scalable, high-margin SaaS business model allows competitive advantage to grow as the proprietary data archive expands. Planet Labs epitomizes this strategy, licensing access to its daily Earth scan via an analytics platform, achieving a 61% gross margin in Q2 FY26, and focusing on AI-powered products like Forest Carbon Monitoring.
## Financial Performance
Revenue trends in the satellite industry show a sharp bifurcation between high-growth "New Space" companies building out new capacity and mature or transitioning players. Revenue growth ranges from +32% year-over-year for Rocket Lab in Q1 2025, driven by a 45% increase in its Space Systems segment, to a -27% decline for Telesat in Q3 2025. This divergence is driven directly by the industry's transformative trends, with growth leaders successfully commercializing new LEO constellations and space systems. Laggards are often mature Geostationary (GEO) operators facing pricing pressure or companies experiencing specific program delays tied to supply chain issues, as Telesat's decline reflects its transition from its legacy GEO business ahead of its Lightspeed LEO deployment.
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Profitability is a tale of two cities: established defense-focused companies generate healthy margins, while most growth-oriented companies are burning cash with negative operating margins. L3Harris, for example, reported a 15.9% segment operating margin in Q3 2025, representative of a mature defense prime benefiting from long-term, cost-plus defense contracts. Conversely, companies building new LEO constellations are in a heavy investment phase, with massive research and development and capital expenditures preceding revenue generation, leading to significant operating losses. Planet Labs stands out as an exception, having achieved a 61% gross margin in Q2 FY26 and its third consecutive quarter of positive adjusted EBITDA, showcasing the potential profitability of the data-as-a-service model once scale is achieved.
Capital allocation strategies are split between returning capital to shareholders and aggressive investment in technology and consolidation. L3Harris's plan to repurchase over $1 billion in shares in 2025 exemplifies the capital return strategy of a company with stable cash flow. In sharp contrast, EchoStar's use of massive spectrum sales, totaling $41.65 billion to AT&T and SpaceX, to repay $11.4 billion in debt is a prime example of a strategic financial reset to fund future competition and integrate its DISH Network assets.
Balance sheet health is highly varied across the industry, ranging from debt-free and cash-rich to highly leveraged or facing "going concern" warnings. Intuitive Machines, Frequency Electronics, and Spire Global are examples of companies with zero debt. However, the immense cost of building satellite constellations has pushed some, like AST SpaceMobile, to acknowledge that its current cash position of over $874 million as of March 31, 2025, is deemed insufficient to fund operations and capital expenditures for large-scale revenue generation, raising substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern without additional financing.
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