AST SpaceMobile Podcast

Anpanman - The Great Satellite Pivot

33 min · 19. touko 2026
jakson Anpanman - The Great Satellite Pivot kansikuva

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John Stankey’s recent keynote address reveals a strategic shift in the telecommunications industry as AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile join forces. This joint venture is not just about general cooperation; it is a calculated move to foster a robust wholesale market and standardize satellite-to-cellular connectivity. By aligning their interests, these carriers are positioning AST SpaceMobile as the primary enabling technology for nationwide broadband coverage. A critical component of this strategy involves the pooling of scarce low-band spectrum. T-Mobile’s participation in the joint venture suggests a significant pivot away from its previous reliance on Starlink. While Starlink offers a roaming-style service, AST SpaceMobile provides deep network integration, allowing carriers to maintain control over the customer experience and service pricing. This architecture is essential for delivering seamless handovers between terrestrial and satellite networks. Beyond consumer convenience, the partnership holds massive implications for national security and emergency services. Integration with FirstNet ensures that first responders have reliable connectivity during natural disasters when terrestrial towers may fail. The joint venture’s focus on shared ground station infrastructure further reduces costs and accelerates the deployment of satellite-based broadband, solidifying the SpaceMob's influence on the future of global connectivity.

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jakson Grain Management Just Got FCC Approval — And AST SpaceMobile Is the Only Winner kansikuva

Grain Management Just Got FCC Approval — And AST SpaceMobile Is the Only Winner

The satellite connectivity space just had a seismic week, and Anpanman is breaking it all down in real time. In this episode, Anpanman covers the FCC approval of the Grain Management spectrum transaction — a development that flew under the radar for most investors but could dramatically expand AST SpaceMobile's low-band spectrum footprint. From the origins of the deal to the letter filed by AST in support, Anpanman walks through why this approval matters and what happens next in the 30-day window that follows. Anpanman digs into the history of Grain Management, explaining how this private equity-backed firm acquired 800 MHz spectrum through a swap with T-Mobile, and why T-Mobile now holds an economic stake in how that spectrum gets deployed. According to Anpanman, this isn't a coincidence — it's a thread that ties directly to T-Mobile's recent decision to join the AT&T and Verizon joint venture with AST SpaceMobile. The spectrum sits contiguously next to the 850 MHz band already contributed by AT&T and Verizon, meaning AST's Bluebird satellites can weave it all together into a powerful, wall-penetrating low-band network. Anpanman also reacts live to breaking news during the episode — the FCC officially approving the Grain Management transaction mid-recording — and walks through the build-out milestones attached to the approval, key nuggets from AST's letter of support including production status of Block 2 satellites and confirmed launch contracts, and what the 30-day negotiation commitment means for a near-term AST lease announcement. He also tackles the Wall Street Journal report on SpaceX's alleged AI device ambitions, the strategic threat it poses to Apple and Google, and why it actually raises AST's value as the only viable counter to Starlink in the cellular spectrum game. This episode is essential listening for anyone tracking AST SpaceMobile's spectrum strategy, the evolving competitive dynamics between Starlink and the major US carriers, and the broader consolidation happening across the satellite industry. Anpanman closes with a clear-eyed view of what the summer catalyst stack — including the August lockup expiry, analyst upgrades, and upcoming launches — could mean for the stock. Don't miss it. 00:26 Introduction 01:41 Grain Management Background and the T-Mobile Spectrum Swap 06:56 EchoStar, SpaceX, and the New Satellite Build-Out Framework 12:01 FCC Approval Breaking Live — What It Means for AST 13:36 AST's Letter of Support: Block 2 Production, Launch Contracts, and Speed Milestones 16:26 Grain Management Build-Out Requirements and the 30-Day Deadline 19:56 Spectrum Strategy, Starlink's Limitations, and AST's Strategic Position 30:21 SpaceX's Alleged AI Device and the Threat to Apple and Google 38:26 Analyst Upgrades, Short Interest, and the Summer Catalyst Stack

Eilen45 min
jakson Spectrum Wars: How AST SpaceMobile Became the Poison Pill Legacy Players Can't Escape kansikuva

Spectrum Wars: How AST SpaceMobile Became the Poison Pill Legacy Players Can't Escape

What does it take to hold a stock from $2 to $130? According to Anpanman, it takes a special kind of delusion — and he means that as the highest possible compliment. In this episode, Anpanman fires up a wide-ranging conversation about the mental fortitude required to invest in the space sector before it was cool, why the critics and short sellers who tried to sabotage AST SpaceMobile ultimately ended up benefiting from the very company they attacked, and what the summer of 2025 could mean for long-term believers in the thesis. Anpanman breaks down the fascinating and often ironic story of legacy satellite players — Viasat, Iridium, and Globalstar — who spent years pooh-poohing the direct-to-device concept, only to find their spectrum holdings dramatically revalued because of AST's pioneering work. He walks through the Ligado deal, Viasat's failed attempts to unscramble the egg in bankruptcy court, and why AST's 80-year L-band rights in North America function as an effective poison pill for any competitor hoping to build a global constellation without the most profitable market in the world anchoring the economics. The episode goes deep on the summer catalyst setup, including the J-LEO project timeline with Rakuten, the expected delivery and launch of Bluebird satellites 11 through 13, a potential multi-launch agreement with Mitsubishi Heavy, and the strategic implications of the grain management 800 MHz spectrum development that AST publicly supported. Anpanman also connects the dots on how Starlink's increasingly aggressive moves into terrestrial mobile are paradoxically accelerating AST's strategic value with carriers like KDDI, NTT DoCoMo, and SoftBank around the world. This is one of the most comprehensive state-of-the-union conversations on the AST SpaceMobile thesis available right now. Whether you're a long-term holder looking for conviction reinforcement or a newer investor trying to understand the full strategic picture, Anpanman delivers the context, history, and forward-looking analysis you need. Don't miss it — and if you believe in the mission, share this episode with someone who still thinks the idea is crazy. 00:26 Introduction & Technical Issues 01:26 Being Called Delusional: A Badge of Honor for Space Investors 03:26 Legacy Player Revival: Viasat, Iridium, and Globalstar's Spectrum Value 07:56 The Ligado Deal and Spectrum Alchemy Explained 14:26 Rocket Lab Acquires Iridium: What It Means for Innovation 23:26 Summer Catalyst Setup: J-LEO, Bluebirds, and T-Mobile 33:26 The Federated Constellation Model and Global JV Playbook 50:26 Grain Management 800 MHz Spectrum and AST's FCC Support Letter

1. heinä 202654 min
jakson The Seven Military Verticals Hiding Inside AST SpaceMobile's Commercial Broadband Constellation kansikuva

The Seven Military Verticals Hiding Inside AST SpaceMobile's Commercial Broadband Constellation

The following text was written by X user @BlackScholesMan https://x.com/BlackScholesMan/status/2070888587101397040?s=20 What if the most important defense technology story of 2025 was hiding inside a commercial broadband company? @BlackScholesMan makes a compelling case that AST SpaceMobile is far more than a satellite connectivity play — it's a full-spectrum dual-use orbital platform with seven distinct military verticals quietly running on the same hardware sold to consumers. This episode pulls back the curtain on a company whose public narrative has barely scratched the surface of what it's actually built. @BlackScholesMan breaks down the architectural insight at the heart of the thesis: AST's Block 2 Bluebird satellites carry nearly 2,400 square feet of phased array antenna — the largest commercial phased arrays ever deployed in low Earth orbit — paired with a proprietary ASIC chip delivering 10 GHz of processing bandwidth. That hardware isn't just a cellular tower in the sky. It's a software-defined aperture capable of running radar, signals intelligence, positioning, and missile tracking missions depending on what firmware is loaded and how the beams are scheduled. The episode walks through all seven military verticals in detail: tactical direct-to-device communications demonstrated with U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, assured GPS-alternative positioning, synthetic aperture radar and missile tracking tied to the Missile Defense Agency prime contract, drone and unmanned systems connectivity, passive RF collection, Golden Dome missile defense sensing, and the AT&T FirstNet public safety collaboration. According to @BlackScholesMan, the binding constraint across all seven is the same — launch cadence — which means every satellite that reaches orbit unlocks revenue across multiple lines simultaneously. Whether you're an investor trying to understand what $ASTS actually is, a defense tech watcher tracking the dual-use space race, or simply someone curious about the future of orbital infrastructure, this episode reframes everything. As @BlackScholesMan puts it: this is not a telecom company that happens to have a defense business — it's a dual-use orbital platform whose commercial broadband line is just one of several missions running on the same hardware. Listen in, do your own research, and decide for yourself. 00:00 Introduction 00:30 The Architecture That Changes Everything 01:12 One Aperture, Many Missions — The Core Insight 02:46 Vertical 1 & 2: Tactical D2D and GPS-Alternative Positioning 04:49 Vertical 3 & 4: Radar, Missile Tracking, and Drone Connectivity 06:06 Vertical 5 & 6: Missile Defense Sensing and Passive RF Collection 07:55 Vertical 7: Public Safety and FirstNet 08:24 The Binding Constraint — Launch Cadence as the Master Gate 09:06 The Reframe and Personal Take

30. kesä 202611 min
jakson J-LEO: Why Japan Just Chose AST SpaceMobile Over SpaceX kansikuva

J-LEO: Why Japan Just Chose AST SpaceMobile Over SpaceX

What happens when the world's two most rigorous technology regulators independently audit the same satellite company and reach the same conclusion? AST SpaceMobile Podcast breaks down the seismic implications of Rakuten Group and AST SpaceMobile's confirmed fifty-fifty joint venture — a move engineered specifically to win Japan's highly contested J-LEO grant, a one-hundred-and-fifty-billion-yen government subsidy with a hard deadline of March 2029. This isn't just a business deal; it's a sovereign statement about the future of space-based cellular broadband. AST SpaceMobile Podcast walks listeners through exactly why AST's bent pipe architecture defeated SpaceX's Starlink model in Japan's procurement showdown. According to AST SpaceMobile Podcast, the core issue comes down to data sovereignty — Starlink's inter-satellite laser links mean citizen data can cross international borders before landing, a critical liability for any national disaster or defense network. AST's bent pipe design keeps all routing, user data, and encryption keys on Japanese soil. Combined with Rakuten's seven-hundred-megahertz platinum band spectrum and AST's orbital inclination shift to maximize Japanese overhead coverage, the technical case was overwhelming. AST SpaceMobile Podcast also connects Japan's decision to a broader pattern of allied-nation validation already set in motion by the United States. From the US Space Development Agency's thirty-million-dollar Halo program contract and integration into the Missile Defense Agency's Shield framework, to the FCC's authorization of AST's full two-hundred-and-forty-eight-satellite constellation and its commercial tie-up with AT&T and FirstNet, AST SpaceMobile Podcast argues that the Rakuten joint venture isn't the beginning of a trend — it's the global confirmation of one. The episode explores how this dual validation unlocks three massive funding pools: allied defense procurement fast-tracking, European digital autonomy grants, and developing-nation universal service funds. AST SpaceMobile Podcast makes a compelling case that this moment fundamentally changes how Wall Street must value AST SpaceMobile — no longer a speculative pre-revenue aerospace startup, but a high-margin, sovereign-grade global infrastructure utility and defense prime. The playbook has been written, the capital pools are identified, and the global rollout is officially underway. If you want to understand what the next phase of satellite connectivity really looks like, this is the episode you cannot afford to miss. 00:00 Introduction 00:19 What Is the J-LEO Grant and Why It Matters 00:50 SpaceX vs. AST: The Architecture Showdown 01:21 The Sovereign Bent Pipe Advantage Explained 01:54 Spectrum Strategy and Orbital Inclination 02:20 US Military Validation: Halo, Shield, and the FCC 03:29 Three Global Funding Pools Unlocked 05:32 What This Means for Investors and AST's Valuation

30. kesä 20267 min
jakson Why AST SpaceMobile Is About to Own 100% of Japan's Satellite Market kansikuva

Why AST SpaceMobile Is About to Own 100% of Japan's Satellite Market

What happens when the most reputable business publication in Japan reports that AST SpaceMobile and Rakuten are expected to win a landmark government satellite project? You get one of the most consequential mornings in $ASTS history — and Anpanman was live to break it all down in real time. This episode captures the raw, unfiltered reaction to the Nikkei report and explains exactly why this news is far bigger than the market currently realizes. Anpanman walks listeners through the GEO Project from the ground up — what it is, how it was funded through Japan's fiscal budget, why the tender process unfolded the way it did, and why every single technical requirement written into the project effectively disqualified Starlink before the competition even began. From working with unmodified smartphones to supporting video calls across Japan, to requiring fully domestic satellite control infrastructure, Anpanman makes the case that this award was built for AST SpaceMobile's architecture and no one else's. Beyond the headline, Anpanman digs into the cascading consequences: full commercial approval expected in Japan by August or September, the opening of business with KDDI, NTT DoCoMo, and SoftBank, a near-certain multi-launch agreement with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and access to non-dilutive debt financing through JBIC and US Exim Bank. According to Anpanman, the federated satellite ownership model being established in Japan is the same template that will play out in Europe through Satellite Connect Europe — and potentially everywhere else AST operates globally. Anpanman closes with a bold prediction: AST SpaceMobile is on a path to 100% market share in Japan, and the market simply hasn't caught up yet. If you want to understand why this moment matters not just for Japan but for the entire global competitive landscape in satellite communications, this episode is essential listening. Subscribe, share, and follow along as the chess pieces continue to move. 00:26 Introduction & Nikkei Report Breaking News 00:56 What Is the GEO Project and Why It Matters 03:16 Technical Requirements That Excluded Starlink 05:26 Emergency Disaster Coverage and Low-Band Spectrum Advantage 06:40 Commercial Approval, KDDI, DoCoMo & SoftBank Opening Up 09:26 Mitsubishi Heavy Launch Agreement and Constellation Build-Out 11:26 JBIC, US Exim Financing and Non-Dilutive Funding Opportunities 17:26 Verizon-BT, Comcast Split, Cable Consolidation and Iridium Trading Halt

29. kesä 202632 min