A BRIEF LOOK AT THE SPACE SECTOR

by | May 18, 2026 | Articles

Expanding the Final Frontier: Growth of the New Space Economy

The commercial space sector is undergoing rapid transformation. At a time when initial public offerings (IPOs) have been sparse, the industry has captured attention. In February, SpaceX merged with xAI in a deal valuing the combined enterprise at roughly $1.25 trillion, confirming its intent for a public listing this year.

Momentum across the industry is accelerating, and launch cadence highlights this growth. In the first half of 2025, a global launch occurred roughly every 28 hours, compared to about one every 36 days in the 1950s.1 Orbital infrastructure has also expanded rapidly. In 2000, roughly 1,000 satellites were active; today, a bout 11,700 are active, with nearly 15,000 total.2 These systems underpin services essential to modern life, from broadband connectivity and navigation to weather forecasting and environmental monitoring.

Market Size and Growth Outlook

The global space economy is now valued at more than $700 billion and growing at about 8 percent annually. Projections suggest it could exceed $1.8 trillion by 2035.3 The satellite manufacturing and deployment segment remains a central growth engine, worth about $15 billion today and projected to reach $108 billion by 2035,d riven by plans to deploy roughly 70,000 new low-Earth-orbit satellites.4

Four Forces Reshaping the Industry

Several structural shifts are driving momentum in the sector:

1. Growth of private capital and commercial leadership. Space activity was once dominated by government agencies such as NASA. Today, private companies are leading innovation and deployment. Firms like SpaceX, Blue Origin and Rocket Lab are driving innovation, supported by venture capital, private equity and alternative financing structures.

2. Falling launch and hardware costs. Access to space is becoming more affordable. Launch costs have declined sharply. A comparison of NASA’s Space Shuttle and SpaceX’s Falcon 9 indicates launch costs per kilogram to low‑Earth orbit have dropped by roughly 95 percent.5 Reusable launch systems and higher launch frequency, pioneered by SpaceX, have dramatically reduced costs, by some estimates roughly tenfold over the past two decades.

3. Rapid infrastructure scaling. Satellite deployment is expanding at an unprecedented speed. SpaceX’s Starlink operates more than 10,000 satellites that serve over 8 million customers.

4. Technological advancement. Emerging capabilities such as asteroid resource extraction and space mining may fundamentally change mission economics by sourcing fuel, water and raw materials in space, reducing dependence on Earth-based supply chains.

Core Segments of the Space Economy

The industry is often viewed across the value chain:

  • Upstream: Infrastructure & Access, i.e., launch vehicles, spacecraft and infrastructure.
  • Midstream: Orbital Operations, i.e., satellite operations, servicing, refuelling and decommissioning.
  • Downstream: Applications & Services, i.e., communications, navigation, observation and data services.
  • Emerging: Experiential Markets, i.e., space tourism, deep-space exploration, in-orbit manufacturing and resource utilization.

 

Investing in Space

With growing excitement around the sector, some investors have asked how to participate. Various options exist, each with distinct risks, including:

  • Space-focused ETFs — Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) offer diversified exposure to aerospace manufacturers, satellite operators and launch providers. While they reduce single company risk, they remain sensitive to sector-wide volatility.
  • Established public aerospace and defence firms — Large, diversified companies with government contracts and space divisions offer indirect exposure with comparatively lower risk than early-stage ventures.
  • Pure-play space companies — Firms whose operations are centred entirely on space technologies may deliver substantial growth potential, but carry higher uncertainty due to capital intensity and rapid technological change.
  • Private and venture investment vehicles — Private funds offer access to early-stage opportunities not available in public markets. These may provide significant upside but typically involve longer time horizons, higher capital commitments and elevated risk.

 

The Bottom Line

The space economy is expanding across multiple dimensions, fuelled by lower costs, increased capital and technological progress. Opportunities exist across a range of investment approaches, but careful risk evaluation is essential. For investors prepared to navigate these risks, space represents a new frontier, poised to drive a wave of technological innovation.

1. https://spacestatsonline.com/launches/
2. https://www.livescience.com/how-many-satellites-orbit-earth
3. https://www.weforum.org/press/2024/04/space-economy-set-to-triple-to-
1-8-trillion-by-2035-new-research-reveals/
4. https://www.goldmansachs.com/insights/articles/the-global-satellitemarket-is-forecast-to-become-seven-times-bigger
5. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1841998/000118518523001114/abovespace_formc.pdf

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Dave Cooper, CFP®, CIM®
Senior Investment Advisor Portfolio Manager
780.484.5777
[email protected]

Tyler Cockbain, BA, CFP®, CIM®
Senior Investment Advisor Portfolio Manager
780.484.5777
[email protected]

 

Justin Nekechuk, B. Ed
Associate Investment Advisor
780.484.5777
[email protected]

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