Amazon Swallows Globalstar for $11.5 Billion — The Satellite Spectrum War Targeting Musk's Starlink
Amazon paid $11.57 billion for Globalstar in a move the industry reads as an opening shot in the D2D spectrum war — not a numbers game against Starlink's 10,000-satellite constellation. The direct-to-device race just went three-way.
— The real play isn't closing a 9,759-satellite gap. It's capturing D2D spectrum.
Amazon has bet $11.57 billion to acquire satellite communications company Globalstar (Nasdaq: GSAT). On the surface it looks like a counter to Elon Musk's Starlink — reinforcing Amazon's satellite fleet. But industry analysis unanimously reads it as the opening shot of a spectrum war. Amazon had been losing ground in the Direct-to-Device (D2D) market targeting commercial launch in 2028, and this acquisition hands it the card to flip the table.
$11.57 Billion, $90 Per Share — A 117% Premium Deal
Amazon and Globalstar jointly announced the definitive merger agreement on April 14 (local time). Globalstar shareholders can elect to receive either $90 in cash or 0.3210 Amazon shares per share. The total deal value is approximately $11.57 billion.
Globalstar shares jumped more than 9% in pre-market on the announcement. Amazon rose about 1%. Globalstar's board has already secured written consent from 58% of shareholders. The close is expected before year-end, subject to regulatory approvals and Globalstar meeting certain satellite deployment milestones.
Still Badly Outgunned — Starlink's 10,000 vs. Amazon's 241
The satellite count gap is stark. Starlink operates more than 10,000 satellites; Amazon Leo has launched two prototypes and 241 production units. Adding Globalstar's 24 satellites brings the total to roughly 265. Starlink also has more than 9 million subscribers — a fundamentally different scale.
Despite this, analysts at Summit Ridge Group view the deal as an inflection point — not because of the satellite count, but because Globalstar hands Amazon a decisive position in D2D spectrum competition, one where Amazon can now move ahead of Starlink's timeline.
The Real Prize: MSS Spectrum — A Three-Way D2D Reset
The acquisition is not about 24 satellites. What Amazon is acquiring is Globalstar's satellite operations, infrastructure, and — most critically — its globally licensed Mobile Satellite Service (MSS) spectrum rights.
D2D technology connects satellites directly to standard smartphones without cell tower infrastructure — widely described as a telecom game-changer. And this market has already been restructuring around MSS spectrum competition.
SpaceX: Acquired EchoStar's spectrum licenses for $17 billion. Analysts note that T-Mobile's PCS spectrum is a small slice; what SpaceX truly wants is MSS spectrum held by companies like EchoStar.
AST SpaceMobile: Contracted with Ligado Networks in March 2025 for up to 45MHz of mid-band spectrum in the U.S. and Canada on a long-term basis. AST recorded $70.9 million in first revenue in 2025 as commercialization begins.
Amazon Leo (new entrant): William Blair analyst Louie DiPalma projects that the $11.57 billion Globalstar price will reprice MSS spectrum assets held by Iridium (NASDAQ: IRDM) and Viasat (NASDAQ: VSAT), and that both SpaceX and AST SpaceMobile will pursue further spectrum acquisitions to expand network capacity.
Apple's $1.5 Billion Secret — Why It Walked Away From Its Own Constellation
Apple had already invested roughly $1.5 billion in Globalstar and separately signed an agreement with Amazon to maintain Emergency SOS and Find My satellite functionality on iPhone and Apple Watch.
DiPalma's interpretation is sharp: 'Apple likely opposed self-funding a mega-constellation to compete with SpaceX and AST SpaceMobile — consistent with Apple's historical preference for partnerships over vertical integration into hardware or telecom infrastructure.'
Apple's calculus: hand the satellite business to Amazon, keep service continuity and negotiating leverage. A financially rational solution that avoids the massive capital commitment of building a constellation from scratch.
FCC Deadline Looming — Amazon's Real Urgency
The FCC mandated Amazon launch half of its full 3,236-satellite constellation (1,618 units) by July 30, 2026, and the rest by July 30, 2029. At 241 units currently, the July 2026 deadline is physically near-impossible.
Amazon filed with the FCC in January 2026 for an extension, announcing additional launch contracts totaling 22 more flights. But industry consensus is that deploying 1,600+ units by year-end is not realistic under any scenario.
FCC Chair Brendan Carr indicated openness on CNBC: he is 'highly receptive' to the deal and said Globalstar could give Amazon the potential to become 'a real competitor to SpaceX in direct-to-cell.'
Amazon's Comeback Card — 'Uplink 6-8x Better, Downlink 2x'
On specifications, Amazon is differentiating. The company claims Leo download speeds up to 1Gbps — significantly above Starlink's typical 45-280Mbps range. In his shareholder letter, CEO Andy Jassy cited hardware performance '6-8x better on uplink and 2x better on downlink' versus existing alternatives.
Enterprise customers are signing up fast. Delta Air Lines (500 aircraft by 2028), AT&T, Vodafone, Australia NBN, and NASA are confirmed customers. After rebranding from Project Kuiper to Amazon Leo in November 2025, the enterprise beta launched April 8, 2026, with commercial launch confirmed for mid-2026.
The Space Internet Market: Now a Four-Way Race
The satellite connectivity market has crystallized into four distinct competitors: Starlink (10,000+ satellites, aggressive spectrum acquisition strategy), Amazon Leo (241 units + acquisition approach), AST SpaceMobile (direct-to-existing-smartphone specialist), and sovereign/regional projects including China's Guowang and OneWeb.
Three angles for Korean investors and companies: (1) MSS spectrum asset repricing at Iridium (IRDM) and Viasat (VSAT) creates potential value plays; (2) D2D commercialization will reshape roaming economics and rural coverage for SK Telecom, KT, and LGU+; (3) the Apple-Amazon-Globalstar triangle has direct implications for Samsung's satellite connectivity partnership strategy.
Closing the satellite count gap with Starlink is widely regarded as 'effectively impossible' by industry observers. But D2D is still early-stage, and the winner will likely be determined by spectrum rights, partnerships, and regulatory approvals — not raw satellite counts. Amazon's $11.57 billion is the opening ante.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
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