Bezos Just Bought What Musk Wanted — And The $200B Space War Is Escalating

benzinga_article
2026.04.15 16:08

Amazon's acquisition of Globalstar intensifies the competition in the $200 billion low-Earth orbit satellite market, potentially sidelining SpaceX. The deal enhances Amazon's Project Kuiper ambitions and secures valuable spectrum for satellite-to-phone connectivity. Analysts suggest that this move not only strengthens Amazon's position but also complicates SpaceX's relationships with telecom partners. The space race is heating up, with major players like Starlink and Kuiper vying for dominance in a rapidly evolving market.

Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) just made its loudest move yet in the space race—and if the breadcrumbs are right, it came at SpaceX's expense.

Amazon's April 14 acquisition of satellite operator Globalstar, Inc. (NASDAQ:GSAT) isn't just another deal—it's shaping up as a direct strike in an increasingly high-stakes orbital battle.

And according to Bank of America, the prize isn't small: a $200 billion low-Earth orbit (LEO) market spanning broadband, wireless, and defense.

The Deal Musk Didn't Get

Officially, SpaceX never confirmed it was bidding. Unofficially, the industry chatter says otherwise.

Satellite analyst Tim Farrar reported that Globalstar's chairman shopped Amazon's offer to SpaceX to spark a bidding war—one where Elon Musk's company was widely seen as the frontrunner just weeks ago.

That aligns with what insiders were saying at SatShow 2026, where a potential SpaceX-Globalstar tie-up was the talk of the show, with executives pointing to SpaceX's aggressive push into direct-to-cell (D2C) spectrum as a natural fit.

Even market signals hinted at a duel. Globalstar shares jumped on reports that both Amazon and SpaceX were deep in due diligence, while SpaceX's last-minute, incomplete FCC auction filing was widely read as a strategic placeholder during parallel negotiations.

In the end, Jeff Bezos didn't just win—he likely forced the price higher.

Why Globalstar Matters Now

This isn't about satellites—it's about spectrum control.

Globalstar owns valuable L-band and MSS spectrum, the backbone for satellite-to-phone connectivity. That's the next frontier, where smartphones connect directly to space—no towers required.

Amazon's move neatly complements its Project Kuiper ambitions, while also aligning with Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL), which already relies on Globalstar for emergency SOS features.

That Apple angle may have tilted the table. A SpaceX takeover could have complicated those relationships, given its overlap with telecom partners like T-Mobile US Inc (NASDAQ:TMUS). Amazon, by contrast, looks like the more neutral—and cooperative—partner.

The $200 Billion Orbit Grab

Zoom out, and this is bigger than Bezos vs. Musk.

BofA sees the LEO satellite market ballooning to $200 billion, with players like Starlink, Kuiper, and AST SpaceMobile, Inc. (NASDAQ: ASTS) racing to blanket the planet with connectivity.

Musk’s Starlink still dominates on scale. But Amazon just closed a critical gap—locking in spectrum, partnerships, and positioning in one move.

Call it what it is: this wasn't just an acquisition.

It was a block.

And if this deal is any indication, the space race isn't just back—it's getting crowded, expensive, and a lot more personal.

Image created using artificial intelligence via Midjourney.