As I mentioned in my previous post, it is a very tall order for a company like Terran Orbital to out-muscle strong, established competitors like Maxar, Planet Labs, and BlackSky and carve out a niche in the earth imagery sector. I don't think Rocket Lab could pull off this feat, even with the cost structure advantage of being their own launch provider. However, Peter Beck has clearly
stated that he intends for Rocket Lab to own its own space services constellation.
That is why I am skeptical that Rocket Lab will try and build out a completely new space services constellation of their own. Other companies have already established themselves in every space services sector that makes financial sense, such as earth imaging and satellite internet. Rocket Lab has to either come up with a novel idea for a space services constellation that hasn't been done yet, muscle their way in to a crowded market like Terran Orbital is attempting to do, or acquire an existing space services company. Personally, I can't think of any novel ideas for constellations aside from building infrastructure around the Moon or Mars, which doesn't make financial sense right now. Trying to go the Terran Orbital route and muscle in to a crowded market doesn't make sense either.
Therefore, I think it makes the most sense for Rocket Lab to acquire or merge with an established space services company. There is bound to be more consolidation in the space industry, and Rocket Lab has deliberately positioned themselves to benefit from this. The main reason why they went public in the first place was to facilitate the acquisition of other companies. So far, the companies that Rocket Lab have acquired have all been partners with Rocket Lab in the past. Rocket Lab was already used to working with these companies before acquiring them, and had made use of their technology on previous missions.
Furthermore, the stock prices of some space services companies like
Spire Global and
BlackSky have been plummeting in recent months. Spire Global and BlackSky both went public at $10 per share but have now dropped to
$2.02 and
$1.75, respectively. At this point, Spire Global has a market cap of only $305M and BlackSky has a market cap of just $203M. These companies are getting cheap enough to be acquired by Rocket Lab!
Also, both of these companies have worked with Rocket Lab in the past. Rocket Lab has launched satellites for both Spire Global and BlackSky, and BlackSky's satellites use Rocket Lab's separation systems, reaction wheels, and star trackers. Since BlackSky's market cap has gone so low and they use so much of Rocket Lab's technology, I think they would be a prime target for acquisition. BlackSky is more of a software company than a hardware company, and their
investor presentation focuses on their artificial intelligence and big data analytics software platform than on the hardware of their satellites, which they do build in-house.
If Rocket Lab acquired BlackSky, they would gain another satellite factory which is already used to working with Rocket Lab's satellite components, but more importantly, they would get BlackSky's expertise in AI and big data. Rocket Lab has historically been a hardware company and acquiring BlackSky could be a good way to strengthen their software skills! That being said, Rocket Lab keeps saying that they only acquire companies that are "best in class", but as maizefolk has pointed out, the resolution on BlackSky's images is
not best in class at 100 cm per pixel whereas their competition is at 30-50 cm per pixel. I wonder how easy it would be for BlackSky to upgrade their resolution?
@maizefolk, do you know what their plans are for 2023?
Nevertheless, I think Rocket Lab and BlackSky have strong synergies. Imagine how competitive BlackSky's services could be if all that money they spent on Rocket Lab launches, separation systems, reaction wheels, and star trackers went straight to the bottom line! Meanwhile, the acquisition could provide Rocket Lab an entry point to space services, much needed AI and software expertise, and another satellite factory.
What do you guys think? Is the acquisition strategy Rocket Lab's best option to break into the space services sector?