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A Delta Air Lines plane
Al Drago / Bloomberg
Delta Air Lines
tested SpaceX Starlink internet service for in-flight Wi-Fi. It’s another milestone for the privately held space company that brought orbital launch capabilities back to US soil.
Most investors can not own a piece of Elon Musk’s space company yet. It’s still privately held. Maybe someday. And if that day comes Starlink looks to be the most valuable piece of his space company.
Airplane Wi-Fi is not the mother lode for SpaceX though. In-flight connectivity provider
Gogo
(ticker: GOGO), for reference, has a market cap of about $ 2.5 billion, and has the largest market share for US plane-based Wi-Fi. Gogo management will not disclose exact numbers in filings and on conference calls. Companies do not typically like to talk about high market shares.
The bigger market is internet for regular subscribers. That service is available in many areas now. The terminal — to receive the signal — costs about $ 600 and the monthly fee is about $ 110.
The potential for growth is largely why SpaceX is said to be worth $ 100 billion based on recent capital raises. (Elon Musk owns roughly half of the stock.)
Exactly how much cash the company has on its books and how much cash it needs to complete its plans to go to Mars as well as deploy tens of thousands of Starlink satellites in coming years, however, just is not known. A public offering might come some day, but for now investors are left guessing. SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment about its capital plans or finances.
For now, investors are left with only a few data points. SpaceX has an estimated 250,000 subscribers today and about 1,700 operational satellites. An old goal of the company was to reach 40 million subscribers by 2025 connecting to, perhaps, 30,000 to 40,000 satellites.
At 40 million subscribers, assuming an average monthly rate of $ 50. Starlink could bring in a theoretical $ 24 billion a year. The US market for high-speed internet services is currently about $ 400 billion a year.
That outlook for Starlink is probably too aggressive. Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas modeled SpaceX in a 2020 report. He did not project 40-plus million Starlink subscribers until 2029. What’s more, he expects costs, and prices, to fall, projecting $ 25 a month for the service by then. That put his revenue estimates by the end of the decade closer to $ 12 billion.
Still, his valuation for Starlink was about $ 40 billion, and, depending on the scenario, ranged from nothing to more than $ 130 billion. That’s wide. And it was in 2020. The business is ramping now. The Delta (DAL) test probably eliminates some of the most-bearish scenarios, and shows that the Starlink business, someday, could go to the moon.
Gogo stock might be reacting, a little, to the Starlink news. Shares are down 0.5% in midday trading. The
S&P 500
spirit
Dow Jones Industrial Average
are up 1.3% and 1.2%, respectively.
Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com