AST SpaceMobile Podcast

Buying Time in Space: Starlink’s Threat and the A.S.T SpaceMobile Lifeboat

22 min · 11 jun 2026
aflevering Buying Time in Space: Starlink’s Threat and the A.S.T SpaceMobile Lifeboat artwork

Beschrijving

The telecommunications landscape is facing a seismic shift following the release of the SpaceX S-1 prospectus. This document outlines a bold strategy to capture a 1.6 trillion dollar market, signaling a move that could potentially replace traditional mobile carriers. As SpaceX positions itself to become the ecosystem rather than a complement to it, the industry is rallying around AST SpaceMobile as a critical strategic defense. This episode explores why the battle is not just about satellite traffic, but about the control of the SIM card and the valuable data ecosystem surrounding the end user. Primary keywords covered include AST SpaceMobile, ASTS, D2D, Telecom, Direct to device, stock, and investing. Abel Avellan and the team at AST SpaceMobile have developed a unique technical architecture designed to serve as orbital infrastructure for existing operators. By using massive antenna arrays, the largest ever deployed in low earth orbit, AST SpaceMobile can deliver residential broadband speeds directly to unmodified smartphones. This approach allows partners like AT&T, Verizon, and Vodafone to extend their coverage without the massive capital expenditure of terrestrial towers in remote areas. We analyze the 50/50 revenue-sharing model and how it incentivizes global operators to support AST SpaceMobile as a utility rather than a competitor. The situation in Latin America is particularly intense, with geography and industrial needs in mining and agriculture creating a high demand for field connectivity. We examine the recent shifts in the region, including Telefonica’s exit from several markets and the curious absence of América Movil from current partner lists. The discussion covers the regulatory challenges ahead, focusing on the principle of reciprocity—ensuring that satellite providers follow the same rules as terrestrial operators regarding universal service and data localization. Finally, we outline critical actions for operators to emerge stronger from this transition. AST SpaceMobile provides the industry with the time needed to adapt, but survival depends on how that time is used. 00:00 Intro / Episode Start 00:29 The SpaceX S-1 Disruption 02:44 Inverting Satellite Design 05:09 Corporate Strategy & Liquidity 08:04 The Battle for SIM Control 11:19 Latin America's Regional Shift 14:39 The America Movil Omission 17:04 Regulatory Frameworks 20:09 Strategic Roadmap for Survival

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aflevering Buying Time in Space: Starlink’s Threat and the A.S.T SpaceMobile Lifeboat artwork

Buying Time in Space: Starlink’s Threat and the A.S.T SpaceMobile Lifeboat

The telecommunications landscape is facing a seismic shift following the release of the SpaceX S-1 prospectus. This document outlines a bold strategy to capture a 1.6 trillion dollar market, signaling a move that could potentially replace traditional mobile carriers. As SpaceX positions itself to become the ecosystem rather than a complement to it, the industry is rallying around AST SpaceMobile as a critical strategic defense. This episode explores why the battle is not just about satellite traffic, but about the control of the SIM card and the valuable data ecosystem surrounding the end user. Primary keywords covered include AST SpaceMobile, ASTS, D2D, Telecom, Direct to device, stock, and investing. Abel Avellan and the team at AST SpaceMobile have developed a unique technical architecture designed to serve as orbital infrastructure for existing operators. By using massive antenna arrays, the largest ever deployed in low earth orbit, AST SpaceMobile can deliver residential broadband speeds directly to unmodified smartphones. This approach allows partners like AT&T, Verizon, and Vodafone to extend their coverage without the massive capital expenditure of terrestrial towers in remote areas. We analyze the 50/50 revenue-sharing model and how it incentivizes global operators to support AST SpaceMobile as a utility rather than a competitor. The situation in Latin America is particularly intense, with geography and industrial needs in mining and agriculture creating a high demand for field connectivity. We examine the recent shifts in the region, including Telefonica’s exit from several markets and the curious absence of América Movil from current partner lists. The discussion covers the regulatory challenges ahead, focusing on the principle of reciprocity—ensuring that satellite providers follow the same rules as terrestrial operators regarding universal service and data localization. Finally, we outline critical actions for operators to emerge stronger from this transition. AST SpaceMobile provides the industry with the time needed to adapt, but survival depends on how that time is used. 00:00 Intro / Episode Start 00:29 The SpaceX S-1 Disruption 02:44 Inverting Satellite Design 05:09 Corporate Strategy & Liquidity 08:04 The Battle for SIM Control 11:19 Latin America's Regional Shift 14:39 The America Movil Omission 17:04 Regulatory Frameworks 20:09 Strategic Roadmap for Survival

11 jun 202622 min
aflevering Anpanm - Why the SpaceX IPO Changes Everything for ASTS artwork

Anpanm - Why the SpaceX IPO Changes Everything for ASTS

Anpanman analyzes the rapidly evolving landscape of the space sector as AST SpaceMobile approaches its pivotal June 17th launch date. This episode explores the manufacturing breakthroughs at the Texas facility, where the production of Micron and BlueBird satellites is hitting a new stride. We dive deep into the broader market implications of the SpaceX IPO, a watershed event that is bringing unprecedented mindshare and institutional capital into the SpaceTech and FinTech sectors. Learn how AST SpaceMobile is positioned as the primary strategic counter for mobile network operators worldwide. The discussion moves beyond the launchpad to examine the high-stakes chess game being played between Starlink, T-Mobile, and the joint venture between AT&T and Verizon. Anpanman highlights the importance of multi-launch agreements (MLAs) with partners like United Launch Alliance, Blue Origin, and Relativity Space, noting that launch capacity will soon be the only constraint for a company capable of producing twelve satellites per month. The episode also tackles the macro environment, analyzing how inflation data and interest rate shifts impact high-growth companies that require consistent funding cycles. Finally, the episode touches on the Golden Dome contracts and the potential for new government awards. As the exclusivity window for certain carrier partnerships closes, the market is bracing for new MOUs and commercial agreements that could reshape the global telecom industry. Whether you are part of the SpaceMob or a general investor, this breakdown provides the alpha needed to navigate the next generation of global connectivity. 00:00 Intro / Episode Start 00:28 Launch Prep and Production Cadence 02:13 SpaceMob Community Mindshare 04:58 SpaceX IPO Impact Analysis 08:43 Space Data Centers White Space 12:28 Macro Inflation and Rate Outlook 20:28 Cape Canaveral Logistics 23:58 Relativity and Blue Origin Progress 27:13 Golden Dome and Space Force 29:28 Carrier Game Theory and D2D

Gisteren45 min
aflevering Anpanman - Launch and SpaceX IPO Roadshow Secrets artwork

Anpanman - Launch and SpaceX IPO Roadshow Secrets

AST SpaceMobile is entering a pivotal week with the scheduled launch of Bluebirds 8, 9, and 10. This episode breaks down the latest news regarding the Falcon 9 launch, the debunking of persistent engineering myths, and the high-stakes competitive landscape revealed in the SpaceX IPO roadshow. As the SpaceMob prepares for orbit, the distinction between AST SpaceMobile and Starlink's direct-to-device strategy becomes clearer than ever. Anpanman dives deep into the upcoming launch logistics at Cape Canaveral, confirming the flight date for the first batch of Block 2 satellites. The conversation touches on the community aspects of the SpaceMob and the tactical decision-making by executives regarding event sequencing for future launches. A significant portion of the analysis focuses on the technical moats protecting AST SpaceMobile, specifically its ability to leverage existing low-band spectrum which is essential for indoor penetration and terrestrial carrier integration. The episode also scrutinizes the SpaceX IPO roadshow, where Starlink's leadership explicitly stated their intent to compete with mobile network operators. Anpanman explains how this mask off moment reinforces the strategic importance of the joint venture between AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile to support AST SpaceMobile as the superior technical solution. By examining the structural advantages of the AST SpaceMobile architecture, including its ability to trick standard handsets into seeing a satellite as a cell tower, the discussion highlights why the SpaceX threat may actually be a catalyst for ASTS adoption. Finally, the analysis explores the future of space-based infrastructure, including the potential for AI data centers in orbit. Comparing the modularity of modern satellite design to terrestrial compute farms, Anpanman illustrates how the race for space-based broadband is evolving into a race for space-based intelligence. This is a must-watch for any investor tracking the convergence of telecom and aerospace. 00:00 Intro / Episode Start 00:02 Intro and Launch News 00:18 Bluebird 8-10 Flight Schedule 01:52 Titusville Meetup & Memorial 03:13 Debunking the Fairing FUD 07:17 SpaceX Employees as Anons 10:02 Option Traders & Short Squeezes 12:52 SpaceX IPO Roadshow Analysis 15:17 Carrier Joint Venture Strategy 18:17 Technical Moat: Low-Band Specs 22:47 Starlink's User Friction 26:47 MNO Game Theory & MVNOs 34:17 Space-Based AI Data Centers 38:02 Valuation & Sector Comparisons

9 jun 202644 min
aflevering Kook's Weekly - June 7 - Riders of the storm artwork

Kook's Weekly - June 7 - Riders of the storm

Kook returns with a high-stakes breakdown of the shifting landscape in the global satellite market, starting with exclusive insights from the defense industry. While the financial markets braced for turbulence, AST SpaceMobile showed remarkable strength, supported by fundamental progress and new spectrum authorizations in Brazil. This episode explores why senior leadership at major defense contractors is reportedly eyeing ASTS and how the 'crazy founder' vision of Abel Avellan is successfully riding a massive secular wave. We dive deep into the competitive dynamics between SpaceX and the traditional telecom 'minnows.' By analyzing recent internal SpaceX strategy decks, Kook explains the dangerous reality of Elon Musk’s vertical integration goals. As SpaceX moves to own the end customer, current partners like T-Mobile are starting to realize the strategic risk of their current path. This creates a massive opening for AST SpaceMobile to act as the essential, carrier-neutral infrastructure for the rest of the global telecom industry. The conversation also looks toward the multi-trillion dollar future of AI data centers in space. Moving high-performance computing to orbit solves the critical terrestrial issues of power consumption and liquid cooling. With patent-protected micron-sandwich technology and the largest phased arrays in low Earth orbit, AST SpaceMobile is uniquely positioned to provide the backhaul and connectivity required for this next industrial revolution. Finally, we look at the immediate catalysts on the horizon. Despite recent launch pad incidents at Blue Origin, the recovery path for New Glenn is becoming clear, and AST SpaceMobile’s production machine is hitting its stride. Kook discusses upcoming satellite shipments in July and why the 'aggregation effect' of spectrum will eventually lead to a market recognition that shorts simply cannot ignore. Join the SpaceMob as we analyze the manifest destiny of global direct-to-device connectivity. 00:00 Intro / Episode Start 00:27 Intro and Market Resilience 02:42 Defense Industry Insider Buy Signals 06:32 The Crazy Founder Advantage 08:02 New Glenn and Blue Origin Updates 10:27 Brazil Spectrum Authorization 13:32 Short Seller Cognitive Dissonance 21:57 China's Starlink Clone Race 25:37 The Micron Sandwich Patent 28:42 AI Data Centers in Orbit 36:37 SpaceX Vertical Integration Strategy 45:02 T-Mobile CFO Goes to War 48:37 Upcoming Launch and Shipping Catalysts

8 jun 202651 min
aflevering AST SpaceMobile - How the SpaceX IPO Valuation Impacts the Space Sector artwork

AST SpaceMobile - How the SpaceX IPO Valuation Impacts the Space Sector

AST SpaceMobile and ASTS investors are closely watching the fallout from the recent William Blair conference. Anpanman breaks down the critical updates shared by Scott Wisniewski regarding the 3-6 month commercial service delay and the massive regulatory win involving Brazil spectrum approval. This episode explores how the company is managing its launch manifest amidst challenges in the broader space industry. Anpanman provides a comprehensive deep dive into the recent William Blair conference notes. The discussion focuses on the estimated timeline shift for commercial service following the Blue Origin mishap and how AST SpaceMobile plans to solve the launch Rubik's cube using existing SpaceX and ULA capacity. The episode also highlights the significance of the 10x10 MHz spectrum allocation in Brazil, a major milestone for the company's global D2D ambitions. Beyond technical updates, the conversation explores the intricate power dynamics of Wall Street. Anpanman explains why institutional investors often gain access to material information before the general public and how the SpaceMob community can stay ahead of the curve. Insights include the mechanics of Reg FD, the importance of analyst models, and why the company might be waiting for the right moment to provide official guidance via an 8-K filing. Finally, the episode looks ahead to the SpaceX IPO roadshow and its potential to re-rate the entire space sector. Anpanman discusses the valuation psychology of IPOs and how a successful SpaceX offering could provide a significant tailwind for AST SpaceMobile stock. With major carriers like AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile fully committed to the AST SpaceMobile platform to combat Starlink's competitive threat, the long-term investing thesis remains robust despite near-term launch pad setbacks.

3 jun 202642 min