Elon Musk Hasn’t Forgotten About Earth Just Yet

It’s tough being a SpaceX competitor no matter if you are building rockets, providing satellite internet or seeking to enter the nascent direct-to-mobile-phone industry.

Elon Musk’s space company has cracked the code on reusable rockets, driving down launch costs that rivals aren’t yet close to matching. This gives SpaceX an insurmountable advantage for launching its own satellites and building out an unrivaled low-Earth-orbit network that now stands at about 8,000 satellites and counting.

Starlink, SpaceX’s satellite internet company, has also proved adept at designing and producing equipment for both space and ground, winning praise from internet customers for the speed provided by its small antenna and WiFi router. The low-cost structure derived from this router-to-rocket vertical integration creates an unprecedented competitive moat.

This is why SpaceX’s agreement to pay $17 billion for a big chunk of spectrum licenses from EchoStar Corp. has raised so many eyebrows in the telecommunications world. The spectrum gives SpaceX the firepower to offer a direct-to-device satellite service that competitors will struggle to match. It all goes back to the low-cost launch capabilities. The moat will widen even more after SpaceX perfects the launch and retrieval of Starship, which boasts the largest payload capacity of any rocket.

An additional problem for satellite competitors is that markets for space services are limited, and the industry requires huge capital expenditures. In densely populated areas, fiber-optic cable and cellular towers can’t be beat on price and speed for broadband internet and mobile phone service. This relegates the addressable market to rural areas where the number of customers doesn’t justify the expense of laying cable or building cell towers.

Half a million square miles of the US are not covered by wireless networks, an area the size of California, Texas and Florida combined, Philip Burnett, an analyst with New Street Research, said in an interview. “So it’s a large land area, but it’s a very tiny population of people,” he said.