Where to Invest Now That Moon Race 2.0 Is Here

The Artemis II mission was a glorious moment for space exploration and a sign of a potential $1 trillion investment boom in the global space industry over the next decade.

More companies than ever stand to benefit from the growing number of objects being launched into orbit. Analysts at Morgan Stanley identified 60 companies poised to profit from the expanding space economy, including miners, fuel producers and manufacturers of industrial gases and propulsion systems.

“Space is back in a big way,” the analysts wrote in their report titled “The Space 60: Picks & Shovels for the Final Frontier.”

While NASA doesn’t expect to return humans to the moon until 2028, the US Space Force has awarded contracts worth as much as $3.2 billion to a dozen companies to develop prototypes for space-based missile interceptors under President Donald Trump’s “Golden Dome” defense plan. Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Wayne Sanders and George Ferguson say the global space defense market may reach $1 trillion by 2035.

And of course, there’s Elon Musk’s rocketry and satellite company SpaceX, which won one of the aforementioned contracts. The dominant player in the sector is expected to go public later this year, targeting a valuation of more than $2 trillion in what is arguably the most hotly anticipated mega-IPO in a year that promises several of them.

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“Space has moved decisively from being a speculative frontier to a strategically vital, revenue generating investment theme,” said Mark Boggett, chief executive officer of Seraphim Space Investment Trust, whose holdings include Finnish satellite company ICEYE.