Globalstar (GSAT) opened up around 12% on the report, with after-hours gains reaching over 15%. Amazon (AMZN) slipped 2.38% in after-hours trading.
Globalstar, Inc., GSAT
Amazon declined to comment. Representatives from Globalstar did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The Financial Times broke the story, citing people familiar with the matter. It said the two companies have been in talks for some time but are still working through several deal complexities.
One of those complications is Apple’s position in Globalstar. Apple took a 20% stake in the company in 2024 as part of a $1.5 billion investment. That deal was aimed at boosting Globalstar’s satellite constellation and ground infrastructure. Any Amazon acquisition would require navigating that existing relationship.
Amazon has been building out its own satellite internet service, called Amazon Leo. Since last April, the company has launched roughly 200 satellites into low Earth orbit and is targeting commercial service later this year.
The broader plan is a constellation of around 7,700 satellites. But the company has hit some delays. In January, Amazon asked the Federal Communications Commission for more time to meet a deadline requiring it to launch approximately 1,600 satellites by July 2026.
Acquiring Globalstar could give Amazon a meaningful boost — both in terms of existing satellite infrastructure and spectrum rights — as it tries to close the gap with SpaceX.
SpaceX’s Starlink is the dominant player in satellite internet, with more than 10,000 satellites in orbit and over 9 million subscribers. Amazon is a distant second for now, and a deal like this would likely accelerate its timeline.
This isn’t the first time Globalstar’s name has come up in acquisition talk. Bloomberg reported back in October that the company was exploring a potential sale, including early-stage discussions with Elon Musk’s SpaceX.
That deal never materialised. The conversations with Amazon appear to be more advanced, though no agreement has been reached.
Globalstar provides satellite-based voice and data services and is perhaps best known to consumer audiences through its partnership with Apple, which uses the company’s network to power the Emergency SOS via satellite feature on iPhones.
That Apple relationship makes any potential deal more layered than a straightforward buyout. Amazon would effectively be acquiring a company in which one of its biggest tech rivals holds a 20% stake.
For now, both sides remain in negotiations. The Financial Times noted that while talks have been lengthy, several complexities still need to be resolved before any deal can be finalised.
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