Space Investing Became Real This Year as Morgan Stanley Hosts Packed NYC Investor Summit
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Below is the news that was posted on (12/14) on the CNBC website highlighting
that Space Investing became real this year as Morgan Stanley hosts
packed NYC Investor Summit.
Duda Falcão
Space Investing Became Real This Year as Morgan Stanley Hosts Packed NYC Investor Summit
By Michael Sheetz
@thesheetztweetz Published Sat, Dec 14 2019 - 8:23 AM EST
Key Points
* Morgan Stanley had its second annual space summit this
week, with analyst Adam Jonas noting the New York City event “ran out of room,”
with three times as many investors attending as last year.
* The event featured multiple panels, with the leaders of
companies like Virgin Galactic, ViaSat, Intelsat, Maxar Technologies, Planet
Labs, HawkEye 360, Parsons, Jacobs and more.
* “We’re going to need those private-to-public moments
that help accelerate” investor interest, Jonas told CNBC after the event.
(This story is part of the Weekend Brief edition of the
Evening Brief newsletter. To sign up for CNBC’s Evening Brief, .)
Attendance at Morgan Stanley’s now annual space summit is
only one barometer, but it shows that investor interest in the extraterrestrial
became serious this year.
“We tripled the investor count” from last
year’s conference, Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas told CNBC about
Tuesday’s event. “We ran out of room.”
Jonas, known on Wall Street for his early calls on Tesla, has recently been looking
at the fast-growing space industry. This was Morgan Stanley’s second
space-focused gathering for investors.
The event comes as the space industry undergoes
widespread transformation, as both aerospace giants and private capital
continue to invest billions of dollars in new technologies and opportunities.
Earlier this year, CNBC published an
investor’s guide to space, in which several Wall Street analysts predicted
space will be the next trillion-dollar industry.
“Investor interest in space is really, really growing,”
Jonas said. ”[But there are still] knowledge gaps and, in the public support
for space, that’s what’s had been lacking.”
Morgan Stanley’s event on Tuesday featured multiple
panels, fielding questions from investors.
According to the day’s agenda, Jonas hosted a range of
discussions. They included presentations on: Capital formation (with early
stage investors Razor’s Edge Ventures, Seraphim Capital, In-Q-Tel and RRE
Ventures); Japanese startups (featuring the CEOs of ispace, Astroscale, ALE and
Synspective); National security (with the leaders of Parsons, HawkEye 360 and
Jacobs); Earth imaging satellites (with Planet Labs and Maxar Technologies); Rocket
launchers (led by U.S. based Rocket Lab and Italian builder Avio); and
Broadband (with ViaSat
and Intelsat).
Photo: Maxar
A telecommunications satellite built by Maxar-owned Space
Systems Loral.
|
The day also featured two keynote speakers: Kevin
O’Connell, director of the Office of Space Commerce, and George Whitesides, CEO
of Virgin Galactic.
The space tourism company made its public debut only a
few weeks ago and Jonas cited that as one of the two key changes he’s seen this
year. While Jonas noted that Virgin Galactic is small, he says “it’s still
something” and pointed to the attention its brought to space as a place of
business.
“We’re going to need those private-to-public moments that
help accelerate” investor interest, Jonas said.
The past decade has seen nearly $25 billion in private
capital invested in space companies, according to investment firm Space Angels,
and Virgin Galactic is expected to be just the first of a new generation to
join the currently small group of public, pure-play space companies. But Jonas’
explained that a second key change means that going public is not necessarily
the only way institutional investors may benefit from this young crop of space
companies. He noted an increasing ability and willingness for Morgan Stanley’s
clients to invest in private companies directly.
While a number of investors came with background and
previous knowledge of the space industry, Jonas said his rough estimate was
that as many as half were looking at space for the first time. “There’s only
one Wall Street space summit,” Jonas said, and he plans to continue hosting the
New York City event at Morgan Stanley’s headquarters, hoping to see even higher
investor attendance next year.
Help Wanted: Space Mortgage Banker
Photo: SpaceIL
A photo of the moon taken by SpaceIL’s Beresheet
spacecraft in orbit.
|
The Commerce Department’s O’Connell, who leads the
recently established Office of Space Commerce, spoke to Jonas’ point that the
knowledge gap in finance has dramatically closed over the past decade.
Attendees told CNBC that O’Connell is confident in the finance community’s
understanding in the wide variety of space businesses. He thinks investors are
more sophisticated today than they used to be, making them more judicious about
investing in space.
O’Connell’s top concern lies in the uncertainty of who
will be the creditors or insurers for ambitious private projects aimed at the
moon or Mars. He said that space doesn’t have any mortgage bankers and
questioned whether that role would fall to the government by default. O’Connell
also wondered aloud if another institution would take on the risk of backing
these typically expensive and high risk missions.
Human Spaceflight as a Catalyst For Investors
While flying people to space comes with great risk, it
also brings the greatest reward. Jonas acknowledged that it is difficult to
quantify the dollar impact of human spaceflight. But Virgin Galactic, Boeing, SpaceX and Blue
Origin each expect to fly astronauts in 2020.
“I think that’s going to have a tremendous impact on
public support,” Jonas said. “Human spaceflight is an innovation catalyst.”
Additionally, he argues that there are few greater
inspirations than those who have been to space and returned to Earth to tell
others about it.
“There’s no substitute for having someone who says ’I was
there and I saw it,” Jonas added in an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.”
Virgin Galactic CEO Makes His Case For Hypersonic Travel
Earlier this week, Jonas’ firm gave Virgin Galactic an
overweight rating, recommending the company to Morgan Stanley investors. Jonas
not only sees value in the company’s core space tourism business, but he
assigned a greater value to its plans for hypersonic, point-to-point travel,
citing it as a potential disrupter of the airline industry.
Jonas said at the summit that some of the feedback he got
from investors questioned the parallels between the space tourism and
hypersonic businesses. According people present who spoke to CNBC, Whitesides
spent much of his time addressing concerns about Virgin Galactic’s skillset to
develop hypersonic technologies – which he believes have a close connection.
Whitesides’ first reason was simply that, for at least
the next few years, Virgin Galactic will be the only company flying people on a
winged craft at near hypersonic velocities.
Photo: Virgin Galactic
VSS Unity glides home after her second powered flight.
|
He then discussed the technological parallels he sees,
explaining what hardware and technology he expects Virgin Galactic will be able
to apply to hypersonics.
Whitesides noted the company already has experience
testing and flying lightweight structures that are both reusable and experience
hypersonic-like trajectories, key to providing any long distance travel
service. He expects Virgin Galactic will learn even more in the next few years
as it begins space tourism flights at higher rates. He noted that Virgin Galactic’s
spacecraft have human pilots, similar to what a hypersonic airliner likely
will.
The CEO said there is work to be done on the structural
side of a hypersonic aircraft, such as ceramic composite materials, adding that
Virgin Galactic may partner with other companies in developing those
structures. Whitesides expects propulsion will take the longest time to develop
for a hypersonic aircraft. While he did not disclose Virgin Galactic’s choice
of propulsion, he ruled out rocket power, saying he’s excited about other types
of propulsion.
Virgin Galactic Gets Ready to Fly Passengers
Whitesides outlined Virgin Galactic’s 2020 goals, which
are to get the company’s facilities in New Mexico running, begin commercial
operations, and fly founder Sir
Richard Branson. He said Virgin Galactic expects to scale its operations in
2021, when it will have two spacecraft and notably increase its revenue.
The company has just has a few more test flights to
complete before flying Branson, the CEO said. While the company has just over
600 passengers signed on to pay $250,000 per person, Whitesides thinks his
company could increase its prices substantially for first commercial flights.
Photo: Richard Branson Virgin Galactic IPO NYSE
Sir Richard Branson stands on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) ahead of Virgin Galactic (SPCE) trading in New York,
U.S., October 28, 2019.
|
Virgin Galactic’s demand pipeline looks full for the next
several years. Even when Jeff Bezos’
Blue Origin begins similarly flying people to the edge of space, Whitesides
thinks both companies will have more than enough demand for flights. He’s
previously categorized
Virgin Galactic’s space tourism flights as an “out-of-home luxury experience,”
which Whitesides said is the fastest-growing part of the luxury market.
“Globally, we think around 2 million people can
experience this over the coming years at this price point. Over time, we’ll be
able to reduce that price point and at that point the market just explodes.
It’s 10 times as many at 40 million people,” Whitesides said in October.
Virgin Galactic’s spacecraft are built to fly for 10
years, he said at Morgan Stanley’s event. With about $1 billion invested in
development, Whitesides said the per unit cost of building additional spacecraft
is relatively low, and Virgin Galactic aims to have a fleet of five spacecraft
in a few years.
Source: Website of CNBC - https://www.cnbc.com
Comentário: Pois é leitor, como você mesmo pode notar, um
setor que movimenta tantos recursos financeiros e gera tantos empregos, além de
ser extremamente estratégico para qualquer nação do mundo, não pode ser tratado
com tanto descaso, falta de visão e incompetência gerencial. Infelizmente meu caro
amigo leitor não acredito mais que o nosso ‘Patinho Feio’ deixará de ser uma
fantasia de abnegados e se tornar um verdadeiro programa espacial que traga benefícios
para a nossa sociedade. Especialmente depois de ontem, quando fiquei sabendo de
que o “Ego” ainda continua fazendo estrago e sendo o direcionador das ações entre
os que tomam decisões no MCTIC, ou seja, a preocupação continua sendo com o ‘Eu’,
com o ‘meu legado’, quando na realidade deveria ser com o PEB. É triste
senhores, essa gente (independente de ideologia) não consegue entender que nação
só se constrói pensando no todo, no melhor para o todo, no bem estar do todo, e
não com individualismo e egocentrismo, foi isto que nos levou a sociedade
pirata em que vivemos, se é que esta joça pode ser chamada de sociedade. O
MCTIC/AEB (ainda precisa de confirmação) segundo minha fonte, estaria trabalhando
nesse momento para antes do final do Governo Bolsonaro lançar um satélite no
espaço (esqueçam o VLM-1), e para tanto, estaria levando avante, com a participação
da Avibrás, aquela ideia de desenvolver um pequeno lançador tendo como base o
foguete Suborbital VSB-30, projeto este inicialmente denominado de VSB-30 Plus,
mas que pelo que parece já mudou de nome. O que acontece leitor é que este
suposto projeto de lançador teria como objetivo simplesmente comprovar a
tecnologia e deixar o legado (entende), ou seja, não será necessariamente um
lançador competitivo e muito menos definitivo, será somente um veículo para
marcar o nome dos políticos que o encomendaram (isto se a Avibras conseguir
entregar no prazo, coisa que duvido muito), e com isso atrasar ainda mais o
desenvolvimento espacial brasileiro. Tomara leitor, tomara mesmo que essa notícia
não seja verdadeira, pois se assim for, estaremos caminhando para mais uma década
perdida. Aproveito para agradecer ao nosso leitor Rui Botelho pelo envio deste
artigo.
Infelizmente nossos políticos só querem terminar o mandato de forma tranquila.
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