Peter

29 posts

Peter

Peter

@pr144

East Coast Sumali Nisan 2009
430 Sinusundan91 Mga Tagasunod
Grok
Grok@grok·
**CantStopClick** ASTS targets ~45 BlueBird sats in orbit by end-2026 (continuous US/key markets coverage), not 45 launches. Currently 6 in orbit (BB7 lost to bad orbit, insured). Mid-June: BB8-10 on Falcon 9 (3 stacked) unaffected. **Other options on table:** - **Falcon 9**: Primary pivot. Multiple slots contracted/available. 3 sats/launch. Bulk of remaining via SpaceX. - **ULA Vulcan**: CEO confirmed stacking up to 5 sats/launch. Expanding as equivalent provider. - **ISRO**: Multi-launch agreement (BB6 flew LVM3). More cadence possible. Company states contracted capacity across providers to hit target ("handful SpaceX/equivalent + BO"). Manufacturing ramped (95% vertical integration). **Feasibility**: Ambitious cadence (~launch every 1-2 mo) but doable via F9 + Vulcan/ISRO pivot. NG delay (static fire setback) increases short-term reliance on competitors but doesn't break near-term catalysts or thesis. Risks: F9 slot competition, execution. Watch June launch + revised roadmap. NFA.
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Leo Edge
Leo Edge@LeoCapital_01·
@blueorigin 's New Glenn just exploded during a static fire at LC-36. $ASTS is down 6% after hours. Before you do anything, read this. No $ASTS satellite was on this rocket. This was a test firing with no payload. BB8, BB9, BB10 are launching mid-June on a @SpaceX Falcon 9. Different rocket. Different pad. Completely unaffected. The most important near-term catalyst hasn't changed. The 45-satellite target for 2026 does not depend on New Glenn. ASTS can hit it on Falcon 9 alone. What IS a legitimate concern: $ASTS wanted multiple launch providers to avoid depending on @SpaceX - who is also their competitor. New Glenn being grounded again means more reliance on @SpaceX for future launches. That's not ideal but it's manageable. ULA Vulcan and ISRO remain alternatives. What IS NOT a concern: the next launch, the constellation timeline, or the fundamental thesis. Nothing about tonight changes the $740B D2D TAM, the carrier JV, the EU sovereignty decision, or the SpaceX S-1 repricing. Algo and some retail will see "Blue Origin explosion" and panic-sell $ASTS because of the BB7 association. That's emotion, not analysis. The thesis hasn't changed. The June launch hasn't changed. Breathe. $ASTS 🛰️
NSF - NASASpaceflight.com@NASASpaceflight

Blue Origin's New Glenn just blew up at LC-36 while attempting to Static Fire ahead of NG-4. nsf.live/spacecoast

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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@LuckyStuey All, If you post this analysis into paid LLM's you get some very good feedback. I fed it to several for comparison purposes. Stuart, I would suggest you do the same before posting. SpaceMobs posts are more in line with reality...
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Stuart Taylor
Stuart Taylor@LuckyStuey·
$ASTS since lots of people have asked for it, here is the clearest way to explain the fundamental engineering flaw with ASTS versus Starlink V2 DTC: ASTS plans to launch a constellation of 248 low band satellites, each with 20-30 Gbps of total throughput (2-3 bps/Hz using their 10GHz ASICs), at a capex cost per satellite including launch reasonably estimated at $25 million (you can argue if this should be $20 million, per ASTS guidance, but it doesn't really change the basic comparison by much). This means the gross capex cost of ~$1 million per Gbps, with gross network capacity of ~6.2 Tbps (real network capacity will be much lower due to coverage and power limitations, but let's just stick to basics). Meanwhile, SpaceX plans to launch a constellation of 15,000 S-band satellites, each with ~20 Gbps of total throughput, at a capex cost per satellite including launch conservatively estimated at $5 million (I'm being very conservative here; this figure might be much lower in practice, depending on how rapid and reusable Starship becomes). This means the gross capex cost of ~$0.25 million per Gbps, with gross network capacity of ~300 Tbps (again, real network capacity will be much lower due to coverage and power limitations, but let's just stick to basics). Although I grant you that ASTS' higher power low band signals will be able to access more users (i.e. users in cars, near windows, in forests, etc. that SL V2 DTC signals might not be able to reach), this will be at a marginal cost to MNOs that is at least 4X higher than SX with a tiny fraction of the total global network capacity (even if SX only has launched 1000 satellites by ~2030 it will still have multiple times the network capacity at a fraction of the marginal cost). As such, MNOs, being masters of Lowest Cost Routing (LCR), will largely prefer Starlink as their carrier of choice for their NTN capacity, with few marginal use cases for the higher cost ASTS service. Do you really think that in such a scenario, ASTS has any chance of recouping the several billion dollars of investment to get to this point? I don't, which is why I believe ASTS will wither and die in the face of competition from SX, although potentially remaining as a marginal player worth single digit billions IF everything goes right for them (i.e. if the technology works and they execute their constellation deployment by ~2028, both of which remain massive question marks to-date). Also, over this time period, it is likely that one or both of Amazon DTD and Equatys deploys their NTN with lower marginal costs than ASTS (although not expected to be as low as SX), meaning even more of the market will be ceded to other players. It is not winner takes all, but winner takes most, with at best one or two also-rans surviving in this market. I don't believe ASTS can be one of those unless it consolidates with one of the other players (by ditching its high cost satellite technology).
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@kingtutcap if META just bought ASTS they'd be well on their way to another trillion in market cap....
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@deepvaluedude if they can't get 35-45 by years end the heat is on...those synergies are so perfect to take on SpaceX....
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DVD
DVD@deepvaluedude·
$ASTS Let me dream: I think blue should ipo once New Glenn is launching with higher cadence, buys out AST or they merge, existing shareholders get converted to blue stock… imagine blue + asts + TeraWave… that valuation would surpass SpaceX due to the D2D advantage being realized much faster. And asts would get cheaper launches due to vertical integration and never have an issue buying launches from SpaceX. @JeffBezos @AbelAvellan @scottwisniews
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@thekookreport from an engineering standpoint, lessons learned will probably shorten the timeline to the next launch..Scott said on the call "BO booster can be reused every 30 days"
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TheKOOKReport
TheKOOKReport@thekookreport·
😖The Launchpad of Worry Kevin's not wrong, the company needs to put metal in orbit. Where he is likely wrong is that the literal universe of homo sapiens on earth and beyond have the same concern. Therefore, the risk is priced…but not the return? Let's all help the professor out by blasting his 1.6% position to the moon so our boy can generate some alpha. x.com/KevinLMak/stat…
Kevin Mak@KevinLMak

$ASTS Consistent with my ongoing analysis, I've reduced my weight in ASTS from 3% to about 1.6%. The operational challenges with scaling satellite production appears to be more significant than I previously expected, and I will want to see meaningful progress on that front before getting more bullish. Either they're running into a plethora problems that they didn't anticipate, OR they're running into problems that they did anticipate and just choose to downplay it for the past 18 months. Realistically the answer is likely a little bit of both. At the end of the day, their number one job is to build and launch birds. Yes there are launch partner delays but it's the building/assembly part that's the current bottleneck. There's a real scenario that they don't have 60 birds in orbit until late 2027. I don't know what the % chance of that is, but it's not zero, and I definitely would have had said zero last year. The issue is the current ACTUAL (not guided) pacing provides zero data for an outsider to extrapolate from. And their previous guidance has been extremely wrong, so it's really hard to say "this time their guidance will be correct." I'm becoming more confident about my previous comments about this turning into an S-tier meme stock. The product seems to be more about the stock price and promises made by the company than actual operations. This is an asset to the company (and shareholders) as the volatility is dampened if bad news occurs. It ends well as long as they manage to eventually reach their goal. I still think the company gets the full constellation up, and significant revenues are likely to follow, but I want to see more metal in orbit, or a far lower stock price before I can be more constructive on the valuation being appealing. x.com/KevinLMak/stat…

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TheKOOKReport
TheKOOKReport@thekookreport·
🚨🚨 $ASTS WEEK IN REVIEW🚨🚨 ASTS has its best earnings call ever and then dominates MWC. Why dance with a Tiger when you can partner with Abel and $ASTS? That, and more, on this week's Weekly…
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@SpaceGrammys reuters.com/business/media… The FCC said SpaceX must launch 50% of the maximum number of authorized Gen2 satellites, place them in assigned orbits, and operate them no later than December 1, 2028.
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SpaceGr🅰️mmys
SpaceGr🅰️mmys@SpaceGrammys·
$ASTS STARLINK VS ASTS D2D RACE - WHO IS WINNING? Many people (including my own family) think Starlink is winning the D2D race simply because they have almost 10,000 satellites in orbit, and seem to be in the news constantly, however, this is extremely misleading, and annoying. What people may find interesting is that only 650 are direct-to-cell satellites, and that even those provide a very limited service. SpaceX even stopped launching them. 1/8
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Love Music
Love Music@khnh80044·
FUNNIEST SKETCH EVER...😆😆😂 That's call marketing.
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@peter_adderton @AST_SpaceMobile @Starlink Your "thinking in the absolute" is fundamentally flawed. ASTS and Starlink will have significant market share and the only question is how much each will have. As a new market evolves it's the companies that make the pivots that will survive and prosper. MNO enablement is key
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Peter Adderton
Peter Adderton@peter_adderton·
@AST_SpaceMobile white-label strategy is fundamentally flawed when measured against @Starlink brand-driven, consumer-facing model. White labeling your entire platform to carriers is the opposite of building leverage. It places all your destiny in the hands of MNOs When you’re selling a carrier a feature instead of selling a consumer a dream, you’ve already lost. Starlink did the opposite Built a global brand, not a back-end feature. Made themselves consumer indispensable, not carrier optional. Forced MNOs to come to them from a position of weakness, not the other way around. If you rely on carriers to sell your product,you’re dead. Starlink understood that. AST still hasn’t. @TMFAssociates
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@outthered good points...more likely a potential merge/buyout partner because of the synergies....
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OutTheRed Investing
OutTheRed Investing@outthered·
Seeing a lot of noise around Blue Origin’s TeraWave and $ASTS, broken down its AST: • Direct-to-cell service • Works with existing smartphones • Backed by AT&T, Verizon, Vodafone • Satellites already launching TeraWave: • Focused on enterprise and government data • Still years from being operational, launches start Q4 2027 Same sector? Yes. Same product? No. If you weren’t worried about Starlink why would you worry about this?
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Kevin Chen
Kevin Chen@Defiantclient2·
$ASTS: Prafulla Kumar, Vice President and Product Head at @reliancejio cites 3 main issues with direct-to-device, all of which are solved by @AST_SpaceMobile's advanced satellite architecture and beamforming technology: 1) Closing the link budget (power gains and losses from today's devices to and from satellites) 2) Compatibility with existing low-cost devices 3) Interference with terrestrial networks medianama.com/2025/10/223-in…
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@thekookreport good point on the ATM, my feeling also, if the EXIM loan comes thru they may not need cash raise 6 months out with other revenue sources kicking in with 20 sat's aloft...
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TheKOOKReport
TheKOOKReport@thekookreport·
🔨TheMAKReport This was incredibly well written x.com/KevinLMak/stat…
Kevin Mak@KevinLMak

$ASTS Recap of yesterday's quarterly update and management call. I haven't reviewed any of Spacemob's analysis yet so some of this may seem repetitive. Overall progress of building + launching satellites looks solid. There has been some ambiguity about the design, build, design, and launch plans/cadence introduced by regulatory filings. I feel like that has been mostly put to rest by management's commitment for 5 launches in the next 6-9 months. There's a very slight chance they're lying, but I think that's incredibly unlikely- if there was going to be a significant design change/related delay, they would have announced it yesterday. Increased per-sat cost of about 10% (from $19m to $21m) is very reasonable and essentially a rounding error. I'd be worried if this creeps up to be > $40m/sat, but I think we're very very far from there. No surprises on cash position or burn rate, everything seems to be largely on pace. The ExIm funding maybe a bit slower than implied in the previous call, but overall on track and seems >70% likely they land something. I think they're being more explicit about the loan counterparties which is a nice nugget. ATM announcement was strategically smart, communicatively deceptive, and implicitly clever. They deliberately did not do the ATM 8k/PR announcement after hours, they did not include any mention of it in the quarterly update. This is strategically smart because it would have overwhelmed the positive news. ATM's cause investors to "freak out" somewhat irrationally. At the same time, to offer a semblance of transparency they mentioned it on the conference call during the financial update (and the stock immediately fell $1 in 30 seconds). This "manages the impact" of the headline much better (I'm getting flashbacks to the Google/ATT $5.50 convert followed by $4.00 equity raise from 2024. They learned!). I think being careful to manage this disclosure delicately is a bit deceptive but the correct decision (keeps the algos away from beating up your stock). I was surprised (and at first annoyed) by the ATM announcement. If they need capital, I think they probably could do another convertible debt issuance, which I think is a better/cheaper method of raising capital given the high level of volatility in the stock. So why not raise another $500m convert and opt for an ATM instead? This is where the implicit cleverness comes in... I think they're doing it because they don't actually need the capital- at least not immediately. Whereas in previous years the company was clearly desperate to fund their build/operations, the situation today genuinely warrants having optionality to raise capital a) if/when you need it, b) if/when the price is right. Their balance sheet gives them a lot more credibility now. Raising a $500m convertible note deal today could easily overcapitalize the company if ExIm comes through and more vendor prepayment of strategic investors come in. They also know their stock is subject to high volatility, and that they have some potentially very big announcements on the horizon. If retail pumps the stock to $50+ they want the flexibility to sell stock into that- it's cheaper than issuing a convert struck at $35. Note that the stock fell $1+ the following morning when the ATM 8K was released. This is the type of price action that they wanted to keep away from the stock during the call. Well played. $20M DIU deal seems pretty meaningful to me. Not because the amount matters, but because they're able to secure any kind of revenue-producing contract at all, for a very _barely functional_ constellation of ~5 satellites. Barely functional isn't derogatory, it's just a reflection of the state of progress. They're either showing very positive deal making prowess (being able to sell an alpha product), or they're showing amazing tech (DIU will pay for a barely working product because it's so good). Realistically, I think it's BOTH and that's why it's meaningful. Investor Q&A hosted a slate of retail investor questions. One question was asking about Golden Dome. This is important because these are deliberately pre screened and picked by the management team. Although there must have been dozens of people sending this question in, they could have easily dodged it and chosen not to answer it. They're pretty transparently saying that they're actively involved in Golden Dome projects (bids), and they are confident they'll win something. Maybe they're wrong, but that's what they're signaling here. Also note that the answers are pre-scripted, not impromptu. Scott's follow up answer to the question is talking about budgeting procedure, which is implicitly reminding investors that its too early to be announcing any awards related to Golden Dome... But soon. Everything in the quarterly update is consistent with the strategic direction that the company set in the past 6-12 months. They're in aggressive "we're playing to win" mode, and I love to see it. This isn't the time to be cautious. The prize that they're chasing is huge and they have their foot on the gas pedal. I think the risk/reward in this situation is heavily in favor of the investor. Currently 7% of my portfolio.

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TheKOOKReport
TheKOOKReport@thekookreport·
🚨🚨 $ASTS WEEK IN REVIEW🚨🚨 A great earnings update. That, and more, on this week's Weekly... It's coming early b/c I'm camping all weekend and don't want to let the 'Mob down.
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@thekookreport Nokia recently released a 5G Private Network in a backpack for soilder's in the field. I expect those backpacks to connect to ASTS satellites...just like phones do via Nokia gateways.... #tactical-comms" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">nokia.com/industries/def…
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
@TheDarklord76 @ASTS_Investors @TMFAssociates ture...I sold my ASTS position in '23 because of doubts I had reading some of his BS, when I found all the online ASTS research with details I bought back before the end of '23....
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ASTS Investors 🅰️
ASTS Investors 🅰️@ASTS_Investors·
I'm told by an industry expert that @TMFAssociates is universally disliked and often laughed at by senior execs in the space industry 🤷‍♂️ $ASTS
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C🅰️tSE
C🅰️tSE@CatSE___ApeX___·
🚨 $ASTS TESTING GRANTED 🇯🇵 🚨 IN A QUICK TURNAROUND THE @FCC CHAIRED BY @BrendanCarrFCC APPROVES $ASTS REQUEST TO OPERATE IN JAPAN WITH THEIR BLOCK1 DIRECT TO CELL SATELLITES. 📡 🛰️ APPLIED 03/07/2025 GRANTED 04/07/2025 IS A RECORD LOW 30 DAYS. 🇯🇵🤝🇺🇸 @Rakuten_Mobile
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C🅰️tSE
C🅰️tSE@CatSE___ApeX___·
@longmier @DepaolaSal @LPM1985 Dear Ben. Thank you for interacting with people about Starlink d2c. I appreciate it. Friendly advice not to judge other companies abilities based on limitations intrinsic to your design. It’s a type of statement Ford could have made based on Ford model T regarding Tesla S.
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Peter
Peter@pr144·
Jeff Bezos: Doge4Amazon - Accept Dogecoin as a payment method - Sign the Petition! chng.it/WcFFngVQ via @Change
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