EchoStar (SATS) has quietly become one of Wall Street’s favored ways to get exposure to SpaceX, and with the IPO now potentially days away from filing, that attention is only growing.
EchoStar Corporation, SATS
The story started in late 2025 when EchoStar traded some of its wireless spectrum to SpaceX in exchange for roughly $11.1 billion worth of SpaceX equity, valued at the time at $212 per SpaceX share. That deal handed EchoStar an estimated 525 million SpaceX shares, or a stake of just over 2%.
SATS stock was trading at $136.45 as of Monday’s close, down 0.5% on the session. That’s roughly double where it sat before the spectrum deal was announced.
TD Cowen analyst Gregory Williams updated his outlook on Sunday, lifting his price target to $155 from $129 and keeping a Buy rating. His valuation assumes SpaceX reaches a $1.75 trillion market cap, with adjustments for taxes and a 10% conglomerate-style discount applied to all of EchoStar’s assets.
Based on that model, Williams puts EchoStar’s SpaceX equity at around $31 billion. That translates to roughly $600 per SpaceX share. Recent private market transactions reportedly put the price closer to $650.
Bloomberg reported last week that SpaceX plans a five-for-one stock split ahead of the IPO, which would bring the per-share price down to around $100. A lower price point tends to broaden the investor base.
The IPO could raise $75 billion or more and potentially value SpaceX between $1.5 trillion and $2 trillion. If that top end is reached, analysts suggest there may be more room for EchoStar’s stock to move higher.
New Street Research initiated coverage on EchoStar on May 13 with a Buy rating and a $161 price target. The consensus across eight analysts currently sits at a Hold, with an average target of $137.14.
One complication is limited Wall Street coverage. Several analysts work at firms involved in the SpaceX IPO underwriting and are holding off on reports until after pricing.
EchoStar is not a pure SpaceX play. The company carries roughly $22 billion in debt and runs a satellite TV business. It also received $23 billion in cash from a spectrum sale to AT&T. Its debt-to-equity ratio stands at 3.17.
The company’s 1-year high is $147.25. Its current ratio is 0.30, and its 200-day moving average sits at $107.69.
On the institutional side, Gamco Investors raised its EchoStar stake by 83.4% in Q4, ending with about 148,698 units worth $16.16 million. DLD Asset Management initiated a position worth approximately $2.48 billion in Q3. Carl Icahn also entered in Q3 with a position worth around $332 million.
Insiders hold 55.90% of the company. COO John Swieringa sold about 50,000 units in March at $113.58, and CEO Hamid Akhavan sold around 71,000 units at $107.52 the same week.
EchoStar reported Q1 EPS of -$0.51, missing estimates of -$0.48. Revenue came in at $3.67 billion, slightly above the $3.65 billion consensus. The company did not hold an earnings call with the results.
The post Can’t Buy SpaceX? EchoStar (SATS) Stock Is the Next Best Thing appeared first on CoinCentral.


