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512: Investing in the Final Frontier – Space
Manage episode 490164292 series 2835101
Not long ago, I made the case that it’s not too late to buy Bitcoin—even after it crossed the $100,000 mark. Why? Because the nature of the opportunity has changed. When governments and institutions start stockpiling a finite asset, you’re no longer just betting on price—you’re watching a new system take shape.
And interestingly, a very similar story is unfolding not in financial markets, but in orbit.
For most of the last century, space was strictly the domain of governments. NASA, the Department of Defense, the Russian and Chinese space agencies—these were the only real players. Private capital didn’t have much of a role. That changed with SpaceX.
SpaceX didn’t just innovate—it obliterated the cost structure. In 2010, it cost about $50,000 to launch a kilogram into orbit. Today, thanks to the reusable Falcon 9, that cost has fallen to under $2,000—and Starship could bring it below $500. These aren’t marginal gains. These are cost reductions that unlock entirely new industries.
We’re now seeing an explosion of opportunity: satellite internet that connects the most remote parts of the globe, smartphones that communicate directly with orbiting satellites, and AI-enhanced imaging tools that monitor everything from crop health to military activity in real time.
Last year alone, space startups raised nearly $13 billion in private investment, even in a tighter funding environment. And Morgan Stanley projects the space economy could surpass $1 trillion by 2040—double its current size. Perhaps most surprising of all: over three-quarters of global space revenue today comes from commercial activity, not government programs.
This isn’t science fiction. It’s infrastructure. It’s logistics. It’s telecom. And yes—it’s investable. And that’s why we are talking about it on this week’s episode of Wealth Formula Podcast.
522 episodes
Manage episode 490164292 series 2835101
Not long ago, I made the case that it’s not too late to buy Bitcoin—even after it crossed the $100,000 mark. Why? Because the nature of the opportunity has changed. When governments and institutions start stockpiling a finite asset, you’re no longer just betting on price—you’re watching a new system take shape.
And interestingly, a very similar story is unfolding not in financial markets, but in orbit.
For most of the last century, space was strictly the domain of governments. NASA, the Department of Defense, the Russian and Chinese space agencies—these were the only real players. Private capital didn’t have much of a role. That changed with SpaceX.
SpaceX didn’t just innovate—it obliterated the cost structure. In 2010, it cost about $50,000 to launch a kilogram into orbit. Today, thanks to the reusable Falcon 9, that cost has fallen to under $2,000—and Starship could bring it below $500. These aren’t marginal gains. These are cost reductions that unlock entirely new industries.
We’re now seeing an explosion of opportunity: satellite internet that connects the most remote parts of the globe, smartphones that communicate directly with orbiting satellites, and AI-enhanced imaging tools that monitor everything from crop health to military activity in real time.
Last year alone, space startups raised nearly $13 billion in private investment, even in a tighter funding environment. And Morgan Stanley projects the space economy could surpass $1 trillion by 2040—double its current size. Perhaps most surprising of all: over three-quarters of global space revenue today comes from commercial activity, not government programs.
This isn’t science fiction. It’s infrastructure. It’s logistics. It’s telecom. And yes—it’s investable. And that’s why we are talking about it on this week’s episode of Wealth Formula Podcast.
522 episodes
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