Amazon Declares War on StarLink: $11.5 Billion Globalstar Deal Ignites Space Internet Battle

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By Rich Duprey Published

Quick Read

  • Amazon (AMZN) acquired Globalstar (GSAT) for $11.57B in cash and stock, gaining 24 low-Earth orbit satellites, spectrum licenses, and direct-to-device expertise to accelerate Amazon Leo deployment starting in 2028, while securing a partnership with Apple (AAPL) for Emergency SOS and messaging services on iPhones. The deal represents less than 2% of Amazon’s trailing enterprise value and can be funded from existing $23.79B in levered free cash flow.

  • Amazon is closing the gap with StarLink’s 10 million customer base by acquiring ready-made satellite infrastructure and spectrum rather than building from scratch, positioning itself to capture a portion of the $15B projected annual satellite connectivity market by 2026.

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Amazon Declares War on StarLink: $11.5 Billion Globalstar Deal Ignites Space Internet Battle

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The satellite connectivity race has shifted into high gear. Billions of people and devices still sit beyond the reach of traditional cell towers, especially in remote regions, disaster zones, and mobile fleets. Low-Earth orbit constellations now promise always-on coverage, and analysts project the sector could generate around $15 billion in annual revenues by the end of 2026.

Tech giants are pouring capital into the gap. This morning, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) stepped up with a decisive $11.57 billion all-cash-and-stock acquisition of Globalstar (NASDAQ:GSAT). The move instantly strengthens Amazon’s Project Kuiper successor, Amazon Leo, and positions the company to deliver direct-to-device service starting in 2028. 

For retail investors watching Amazon’s next growth chapter, this deal is more than satellite hardware. It is a calculated bet on closing the digital divide while expanding high-margin connectivity revenue.

Why Amazon Made the Move

Globalstar brings a ready-made foundation: roughly two dozen low-Earth orbit satellites, globally harmonized radio spectrum licenses, and proven direct-to-device expertise. Amazon Leo already operates more than 200 satellites and plans thousands more. Adding Globalstar’s assets accelerates voice, text, and data coverage where terrestrial networks stop. 

The deal also locks in continued support for Apple’s (NASDAQ:AAPL) Emergency SOS, Messages, Find My, and Roadside Assistance features on iPhone and Apple Watch models. Apple and Amazon confirmed the partnership in the same announcement. Panos Panay, Amazon’s senior vice president of Devices & Services, put it plainly: the combination delivers “faster, more reliable service in more places.”

Simply put, Amazon skips years of ground-up development. The network will integrate with mobile operators to extend cellular service globally, targeting consumers, enterprises, IoT devices, and governments. Deployment begins in 2028. That timeline matters. StarLink already serves over 10 million customers. Amazon now closes the gap faster than building from scratch.

The Numbers Tell a Compelling Story

At first glance, $11.57 billion looks big. Yet it fits comfortably inside Amazon’s balance sheet. Trailing 12-month revenue stands at $716.92 billion, with quarterly revenue growth of 13.6% year-over-year. Levered free cash flow reached $23.79 billion over the same period. The deal represents less than 0.5% of Amazon’s trailing enterprise value and can be funded from existing cash flows without straining operations.

Globalstar shareholders receive $90 per share in cash or the equivalent in Amazon stock (0.3210 shares, capped at $90 value), with cash elections limited to 40%. That values the target at a 117% premium to its late-October 2025 price. Globalstar’s pre-deal market cap hovered near $7.6 billion. The $11.57 billion price tag, subject to a possible $110 million downward adjustment for missed milestones, still reflects a clean strategic premium.

Amazon’s valuation remains reasonable for its growth profile. The trailing P/E ratio sits at 33.46, with a forward P/E near 26. That stacks up efficiently against pure-play satellite peers that lack Amazon’s e-commerce and cloud scale. Investors get exposure to a high-growth adjacency without diluting the core business.

Risks Investors Should Weigh

That said, execution is not automatic. The deal closes in 2027, pending regulatory approvals. Integration of spectrum and satellites must hit operational milestones, or the price drops. Competition from StarLink remains intense. And while the direct-to-device market is expanding rapidly, monetization models for consumer and enterprise services are still evolving.

Last month, Amazon announced it was launching enterprise D2D service within months, and hinted at the Globalstar acquisition when Amazon Leo VP of Business Chris Weber hinted at Amazon making “big announcements” soon. 

Granted, Amazon’s multibillion-dollar Leo investment already creates jobs and infrastructure across the U.S. and Europe. The company has a track record of turning infrastructure bets into profitable ecosystems, from AWS to logistics.

Key Takeaway

This $11.57 billion acquisition is not a flashy headline grab. It is a disciplined, data-backed step that hands Amazon immediate satellite assets, spectrum, and an Apple partnership while unlocking a slice of the $15 billion direct-to-device opportunity ahead. 

For patient shareholders, the long-term revenue tailwind outweighs near-term integration risks. Amazon’s scale, cash flow, and 13.6% revenue momentum give it the runway to make this work. Smart investors should view any post-announcement dip as a chance to buy the stock. When all is said and done, connectivity is the next frontier, and Amazon just secured a front-row seat.

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About the Author Rich Duprey →

After two decades of patrolling the dark corners of suburbia as a police officer, Rich Duprey hung up his badge and gun to begin writing full time about stocks and investing. For the past 20 years he’s been cruising the markets looking for companies to lock up as long-term holdings in a portfolio while writing extensively on the broad sectors of consumer goods, technology, and industrials. Because his experience isn’t from the typical financial analyst track, Rich is able to break down complex topics into understandable and useful action points for the average investor. His writings have appeared on The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, Yahoo! Finance, and Money Morning. He has been interviewed for both U.S. and international publications, including MarketWatch, Financial Times, Forbes, Fast Company, and USA Today.

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