Space: The Final Investment Frontier?
Gordon Bernhardt
Principal, Strategic Advisor, Author, and Philanthropist | My firm helps successful entrepreneurs, executives, retirees & their families make informed financial decisions as fiduciaries. | Let’s talk!
As anyone old enough to remember the?Star Trek?television series knows, space is the final frontier. Our military now has a space force. In June of this year, we got a full report from the government on what it knows about UFOs. Space is in the news, from space tourism to the long-shot prediction by Elon Musk that humans will soon colonize Mars.
But is space a growth industry worth investing in??
For now, the answer is “probably not,” but we are getting close to the time when ordinary tourists will venture beyond our atmosphere. The major players in the space tourism market haven’t yet proven that they can safely deliver a space experience to their passengers, though Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin is expected to initiate its first crewed flight when its new Shepard rocket launches on July 20. Virgin Galactic, a part of Richard Branson’s Virgin Group, plans four test flights of its SpaceShipTwo system before it attempts to begin commercial service in 2022. The first full revenue flight, on which the Italian government has booked members of the Italian Air Force at $500,000 per seat, will fly later this year. Elon Musk’s SpaceX, meanwhile, is focusing on a different market, launching Starlink satellites that are expected to provide internet service to earthbound consumers. So far, the company has launched 1,500 interconnected orbiters.
The economics of these ventures don’t look promising at present. SpaceX is selling?Starlink satellite internet?packages for $99 a month, but these are preorders that are fully refundable. It is going to take a lot of $99 orders to pay for just the launches that have taken place so far. Meanwhile, competitor?Iridium Communications?already has 66 low-Earth orbiting satellites that are providing voice and data connectivity everywhere that SpaceX plans to serve.
Virgin Galactic?recently reported a loss of $55.9 million in the first quarter of the year, after losing $59.5 million in the last quarter of 2020 and $63.6 million in the quarter before that. Its upcoming flight will generate just $2 million, which means the company would have to book at least 35–40 flights a year to break even—and one has to wonder how big a market there is for tourists who will line up to pay up to $500,000 for a trip that would barely graze the top edge of the atmosphere.
A more plausible business model is one from Aerojet Rocketdyne; the company’s Space Launch System is paid for via aerospace and defense contracts, rather than upscale tourists looking for a thrill. Another defense contractor, Northrup Grumman, focuses on a Mission Extension Vehicle initiative, which refuels satellites in space and returns them to operational status. Others look more futuristic. Nokia, for example, has landed a contract to establish a 4G cellular network on the Moon, should NASA eventually find a way to colonize it.
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Meanwhile, more competition is on the way. A rocket builder called?Astra, housed in the former US Navy Air Station in Alameda, California, has already launched its 40-foot Electron rocket into space and has plans to reach orbit next year. The company anticipates charging $2.5 million per launch, carrying communication satellite payloads up to 300 kilograms into low-Earth orbit. The company is going public through acquisition by a special purpose acquisition company but is not currently trading on any exchange.
At Bernhardt Wealth Management, we work with our clients to maintain “down to earth” investing and financial planning strategies, but that isn’t to say that at some point in the future, investing in space travel, exploration, and even commerce won’t become part of more and more portfolios. Part of our job is to keep tabs on developing trends in investing, innovation, taxation, economics, and other important trends that impact our clients’ financial concerns. As a result, we are able to provide up-to-date advice and guidance that is always delivered with our clients’ best interest foremost. To learn more about our fiduciary wealth management process, please click?here.
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Go to the Bernhardt Wealth Management?Blog?where this was first published to read this and other blog entries.
About Gordon J. Bernhardt: President and founder of Bernhardt Wealth Management and author of Profiles in Success: Inspiration from Executive Leaders in the Washington D.C. Area, Gordon and his team provide financial planning and wealth management services to affluent individuals, families and business-owners throughout the Washington, D.C. area. Since establishing his firm in 1994, he and his team have been focused on providing high-quality service and independent, unbiased financial advice to help clients make informed decisions about their money. For more information, visit?Bernhardt Wealth Management?and?Profiles in Success.
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3 年Thanks for posting