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航天

China’s commercial space race heads to market

The latest fundraising and IPO preparations by satellite startup Spacety is part of a wider movement towards public listings by Chinese space companies.
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{"text":[[{"start":5.8,"text":"This article only represents the author's own views."}],[{"start":10,"text":"Elon Musk’s SpaceX and other space ventures have already reached a feat that China has yet to replicate, namely, turning rockets, satellites and space-based services into a financial story big enough to capture global investor attention. Mastering that skill is becoming increasingly important in China as a growing number of domestic space startups head toward public markets. The question now is no longer who can get something into orbit, but rather who can build a profitable business doing it."}],[{"start":38.3,"text":"That’s what makes the latest move by satellite startup Spacety worth watching. The Changsha-based company earlier this month disclosed 1.3 billion yuan ($190 million) in fresh funding. It also entered IPO tutoring in early February with the Hunan securities regulator, a process that represents the first stage of moving towards an IPO on China’s domestic A-share markets, according to a posting by one of its investors."}],[{"start":67.9,"text":"Spacety is a niche player focused on synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellites. While that’s a niche area of the satellite universe, the company’s story offers a window into where China’s commercial-space sector is headed. That’s because Spacety sits at the intersection of several of the industry’s biggest themes: lower-cost hardware, data services and the still-unfinished search for a workable commercial model."}],[{"start":93.25,"text":"Spacety is far from alone among China’s space sector companies racing to market. Rocket makers such as LandSpace and CAS Space have moved closest to listings, while others, including Space Pioneer, Galactic Energy and iSpace, are in the IPO process as well. The common destination is Shanghai’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market, whose listing standards were widened last year to cover commercial aerospace. The result is that China’s commercial-space sector is starting to look less like a collection of engineering experiments and more like a market taking shape. Notably, members of the group are all chasing listings on domestic markets so far, leaving international investors in Hong Kong out in the cold, at least for now."}],[{"start":136.15,"text":"China’s first class of private space companies spans several tracks, including satellite launch and manufacturing, as well as low-orbit constellation building and related downstream businesses. The first wave of excitement was driven by launch technology, especially reusable rockets. LandSpace’s STAR Market filing, for example, aims to raise 7.5 billion yuan for its reusable rocket business."}],[{"start":162.65,"text":"New phase"}],[{"start":164.20000000000002,"text":"But the next phase includes what comes after the launch, with attention on companies that can turn satellites into communications networks, navigation services, remote-sensing products or other repeatable revenue streams."}],[{"start":176.70000000000002,"text":"That’s where Spacety is a useful case study. Unlike the better-known rocket hopefuls, the company focuses on SAR, a tougher but potentially more defensible niche in commercial space. Unlike optical satellites, which depend on clear lines of vision, SAR satellites use microwave signals that allow them to work at night and through clouds and smoke."}],[{"start":197.10000000000002,"text":"Spacety has completed 21 space missions and launched 38 satellites, making it one of China’s more visible commercial SAR players. Its Haisi-1, launched in 2020, was widely described as China’s first commercial SAR remote-sensing satellite, and the company says it now has capability that can detect millimeter-level ground deformation. That matters because the real commercial prize is the ability to monitor ground-based information like the condition of bridges and tunnels, land subsidence and providing imaging services in emergencies."}],[{"start":231.60000000000002,"text":"But that ability doesn’t translate to an immediately sustainable business model, which is why everyone from China’s private space sector is racing to market in search of capital to keep the lights on. LandSpace remains heavily loss-making, while CAS Space has similarly warned that limited launch frequency, underfilled payloads and heavy depreciation are keeping its single missions from covering their full costs. The same structural problem hangs over satellite and sensing players, namely, underutilization as they search for customers."}],[{"start":264.95000000000005,"text":"That means public listings aren’t just about rewarding ambition, but also decide which companies deserve more capital to keep building. A few years ago, the pitch from these companies was mostly hypothetical, built on the size of giant addressable markets and rhetoric over who could become “China’s SpaceX.” Now the questions are becoming more practical: How often can you launch? Can you cut costs? Are payloads full? How full is the order book? How much of the revenue is recurring?"}],[{"start":293.00000000000006,"text":"Policy push"}],[{"start":294.70000000000005,"text":"Government policy has helped create this moment where the space sector transitions from the theorical to the practical. Beijing’s new rules clearing the path for space listings on the STAR Market give the most promising players a clearer domestic funding channel as they continue to seek profitable business models."}],[{"start":312.65000000000003,"text":"The comparison of the Chinese space hopefuls with SpaceX is useful, but there are some key differences. Most notably, SpaceX has changed the conversation by showing what happens when lower launch costs, satellite infrastructure and downstream services begin reinforcing one another to create profitable business models."}],[{"start":332.55,"text":"China’s industry is unlikely to produce the same type of domestic clone with many space businesses under a single entity. Its commercial space buildout looks more fragmented, shaped by regional industrial clusters, local government funding, and a wide field of specialized companies chasing different parts of the value chain. In that system, Spacety isn’t trying to become China’s SpaceX, but rather a specialist in the durable radar-data and monitoring business."}],[{"start":358.7,"text":"That may still prove hard enough. Spacety carries not only the usual burdens of being a young capital-intensive company, but also more politically sensitive baggage. It became the target of U.S. sanctions in 2023, when the U.S. Treasury Department accused its Luxembourg subsidiary of providing satellite imagery to support Wagner-linked operations for Russia’s war in Ukraine. That serves as a reminder that risk for Chinese space companies doesn’t stop at engineering setbacks or delayed orders. This is a sector where finance, national strategy and geopolitics are all tightly entangled."}],[{"start":398.15,"text":"If the first stage of China’s commercial-space boom was about proving that private companies could find a place at the table, the next stage will be proving they can stay there. The easy part was attracting attention with launch milestones, announcements of giant constellation plans and grand comparisons to Musk. Now comes the harder part: building repeatable launch schedules, filling payload capacity, turning satellite data into services customers will pay for, and doing all that before losses and capital needs outrun investor patience."}],[{"start":436.29999999999995,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1776911367_3637.mp3"}

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