Amazon's $11.57 Billion Deal for Globalstar Challenges Musk's Starlink
By Reuters | 14 Apr, 2026
Globalstar's two dozen satellites give Amazon the foundation for an internet services to challenge SpaceX's Starlink which has already deployed 10,000 satellites.
Amazon.com said on Tuesday it would acquire Globalstar in an $11.57 billion deal, bolstering its fledgling satellite business as it looks to take on Elon Musk-led bigger rival Starlink.
Shares of satellite company Globalstar were up more than 9% in premarket trading, after gaining over 6% in the past two weeks following media reports of the companies' discussions. The stock had nearly doubled in value last year and has risen about 12% so far this year, before news of an acquisition emerged. Amazon shares rose about 1% on Tuesday.
The deal gives Amazon access to Globalstar's network of two dozen satellites, boosting the tech giant's ambitions to challenge SpaceX unit Starlink, which currently has about 10,000 units in orbit.
Under the deal, the satellite firm's shareholders can elect to receive either $90 in cash or 0.3210 shares of Amazon common stock for each share of Globalstar they own, the companies said.
Amazon has been working to ramp up its network by deploying about 3,200 satellites in Earth's low orbit by 2029, with roughly half required to be in place by a July 2026 regulatory deadline.
The company currently operates a network of more than 200 satellites and is preparing to roll out its satellite internet services later this year.
In contrast, Elon Musk's Starlink - the dominant satellite-based internet service provider - already serves more than nine million users globally.
Covington, Louisiana-based Globalstar, popular as the service that powers Apple's "Emergency SOS" feature, operates about two dozen satellites in low-Earth orbit. Late last year, it said a new, Apple-backed network under development would expand that to 54 satellites, including a small number of backups.
Globalstar offers voice, data, and asset-tracking services to customers across the enterprise, government and consumer markets.
In a parallel move, Amazon and Apple - which has invested some $1.5 billion in Globalstar - have signed an agreement to continue powering the satellite-based safety features, such as Emergency SOS and Find My, for iPhone and Apple Watch users.
The acquisition is expected to close next year, subject to regulatory approvals and achievement of specific satellite deployment milestones by Globalstar.
(Reporting by Deborah Sophia and Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Leroy Leo)
Recent Articles
- Vance Insists US Made Much Progress in Iran Talks
- 3rd Iran-Linked Tanker Passed Strait of Hormuz on Day 1 of US Blockade
- US Small Business Sentiment Fell to 11-Month Low in March
- BMW Q1 Deliveries Slid on China, US Weakness Despite Europe Growth
- Robotaxi Incident Prompts China to Recheck Smart Car Road Tests
- Audi to Launch 3rd Model in 2027 Under China Joint Venture Brand
- Proposed United-American Mega Merger Would Face Antitrust Block
- Amazon's $11.57 Billion Deal for Globalstar Challenges Musk's Starlink
- March Producer Prices Increased Less Than Expected
- US Solar and Wind Contracts Surged in Q1, Faced Sharply Higher Prices
