AI Panel

What AI agents think about this news

The panel is divided on Amazon's Globalstar acquisition, with concerns about capital intensity, execution risks, and spectrum constraints, but also seeing strategic value and potential synergies.

Risk: Significant capital intensity and execution risks, including potential drag on margins and negative free cash flow.

Opportunity: Potential for strategic synergies with AWS and Prime, and the possibility of capturing the enterprise backbone with proprietary 'last mile' infrastructure.

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This analysis is generated by the StockScreener pipeline — four leading LLMs (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) receive identical prompts with built-in anti-hallucination guards. Read methodology →

Full Article CNBC

Amazon is making a big move to advance its ambitions in outer space — one that is pricey and pits it against a formidable incumbent. It could also end up a huge winner for the e-commerce and cloud giant. The Seattle-based company said this month it plans to acquire satellite operator Globalstar for $90 per share in a cash-and-stock deal worth about $11.6 billion. The deal, expected to close in 2027, will bolster Amazon's budding internet-from-space service called Amazon Leo, which is slated to begin commercial broadband service in mid-2026. It also helps Leo's standing against the dominant player in the satellite internet space, SpaceX, led by Elon Musk. The move reinforces Amazon's commitment to the expensive and extensive task of building out a satellite internet service — a pursuit that, for years, has given some investors pause as they questioned the price tag and the time to reap the rewards. It used to be called Project Kuiper and originated in 2019 when Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was still CEO. Leo has the potential to "be a huge business out of nowhere," Jim Cramer said in reaction to the Globalstar deal. "It's a sudden pillar. This will be something that we're going to be talking about." He added, "It flips from being something that [makes you say] I'm tired of hearing the losses, to I think it's going to be big gains here." Globalstar will be the second-largest acquisition in Amazon's history, behind Whole Foods, for $13.7 billion in 2017 . On its face, spending almost $12 billion on a company projected to bring in less than $300 million in revenue this year seems like an expensive purchase. Whole Foods booked $16 billion in sales in its fiscal 2017. Plus, the acquisition comes at a time when Amazon is already spending heavily on AI-related buildouts, which will likely result in negative free cash flow in 2026. This comes after Amazon's free cash flow fell 71% in 2025 to $11.2 billion. The strategic rationale is there, however. In defending the Globalstar deal, Morgan Stanley said its size is small relative to Amazon's large capex, and analysts argued the tie-up has "applications to AMZN's broader business down the road, such as providing connectivity for warehouse automation, drones, and more." Indeed, Leo's importance to Amazon goes far beyond its own eventual revenue stream — valuable as that may become. For a company projected to do roughly $800 billion in revenue this year, it takes a lot to move the needle. It is Leo's potential to also strengthen Amazon's retail and cloud businesses that justifies its prior commitment to invest at least $10 billion in the project . Now, it is what justifies buying Globalstar. AMZN 1Y mountain Amazon's stock performance over the past 12 months. A closer look at Globalstar Globalstar operates low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites connecting more than 120 countries, and it holds wireless spectrum licenses across the globe. Notably, Globalstar is also Apple's technology partner for the iPhone maker's emergency satellite texting and "Find My" device services. Apple and Amazon agreed to continue that relationship and collaborate on future Leo services. Globalstar currently has about 24 satellites in space, with agreements to acquire and deploy roughly 50 new satellites from Canada's MDA Space . Globalstar's fleet would add to the 240 satellites that Amazon has launched into LEO since last April. Amazon has secured approval from the Federal Communications Commission to launch roughly 7,700 satellites in the coming years. The company was supposed to have 1,600 of them in the sky by July to meet an FCC mandate. In January, Amazon filed for a 24-month extension. Globalstar's arguably most coveted asset, though, is its ownership of spectrum licenses. Spectrum is the highway that enables wireless communication. But it is a finite, naturally occurring resource, so it's carefully managed worldwide by regulators to ensure the traffic moves smoothly and signals don't pile up. Licenses are therefore required to "drive" on it. Globalstar's licenses are key to operating what's known as direct-to-device (D2D) services, which allow regular smartphones and other devices to connect directly to satellites — no need to go through cell towers first or attach special hardware. This helps fill in the gaps in rural areas without traditional cellular coverage. The Globalstar-Apple partnership is an example of D2D services. The reason this matters: When Amazon Leo begins its planned commercial service this year, it will start by offering broadband internet to homes, businesses, and government entities. Amazon plans to roll out a next-generation D2D satellite system starting in 2028 to deliver voice, data, and messaging services directly to mobile phones, integrated with its broadband systems. Owning Globalstar "enables faster deployment of D2D connectivity at scale—reaching areas where terrestrial deployment is delayed, cost-prohibitive, or vulnerable to disruption," Amazon said in a press release. With Globalstar's licenses, Amazon can launch its D2D network "without being entirely reliant" on mobile network operator partnerships for spectrum, Morgan Stanley noted. Verizon , AT & T , and T-Mobile are the dominant mobile network operators in the U.S. Deutsche Telekom, Swisscom, and Vodafone are among the European players. This helps close the wide gap between Leo and SpaceX's Starlink, which has an industry-leading position with more than 10,000 satellites in orbit and over 10 million users . SpaceX is targeting a blockbuster initial public offering in late June. Musk-owned SpaceX started with a Starlink broadband offering before taking steps in recent years to expand into D2D service. As part of that push, SpaceX in September announced a $17 billion deal to buy wireless spectrum licenses from EchoStar , the parent company of Dish TV and Boost Mobile. SpaceX has also partnered with T-Mobile to access spectrum. Wall Street firm Citizens estimated Starlink's annual revenue at $10 billion to $11 billion, assuming $90 in monthly revenue from 10 million subscribers. It also said Starlink appears to be highly profitable. "Importantly, the opportunity is huge and can support multiple players, despite Amazon's late entrance, as PWC estimates that consumers spend $799B globally on mobile telecom services, which grows to $1.2B when including fixed broadband and fixed voice services," Citizen analysts wrote to clients last week. Citizens has a market perform rating on Amazon and a price target of $315 on the stock. AST SpaceMobile — in the news last week due to a satellite deployment mishap with Bezos' privately held rocket company Blue Origin — is another player in the D2D service. AT & T and Verizon are working with AST to offer cellular service from space. How Leo will strengthen Amazon The complement of broadband and D2D services will help Leo reach its full potential, as far as both consumers and investors are concerned. In his recent annual letter to shareholders , Amazon CEO Andy Jassy discussed Amazon's satellite internet ambitions, highlighting the scale of the opportunity of expanding access to high-speed internet for the billions around the globe who don't have it. "If you don't have broadband connectivity, you can't engage in many of the digital activities," Jassy wrote. Amazon Leo already has "meaningful revenue commitments" both from government and enterprises, Jassy added. Delta Air Lines chose Leo for future Wi-Fi starting in 500 planes in 2028. Other committed Leo customers include JetBlue, AT & T, Vodafone, DIRECTV Latin America, and NASA. Of course, if the Globalstar deal gets approved by regulators, Apple is poised to join that list, too. A key advantage for Leo in the commercial and government market is the existing customer base of Amazon Web Services, which is easily the world's largest cloud computing service by revenue. All the companies that rely on AWS for some of their computing needs are natural potential customers for Leo. "The sales motion for Leo into those accounts is substantially easier than it would be for a standalone operator," analysts at William Blair wrote in a note to clients this week. "Early wins already illustrate the traction Amazon is getting in the enterprise segment, even though its service is not even commercially available yet. In contrast, Starlink has had to build its enterprise motion essentially from scratch, and to date its strongest traction is in consumer, not traditional enterprise." William Blair estimated the enterprise opportunity at roughly $100 billion. "Enterprise customers can move data from a remote site directly to their AWS workloads through Amazon Leo seamlessly," wrote the firm's analysts, who have an outperform rating on Amazon's stock. This illustrates how Leo could strengthen the attractiveness of AWS, which is already the company's profit engine. To attract consumers, Amazon could offer Leo's connectivity services bundled with Prime, which has more than 200 million members worldwide. At the same time, Leo could expand the pool of potential Prime users. Consider someone in a rural area who eventually has reliable internet service thanks to Leo. That theoretically makes Prime Video more exciting to them. This dovetails with Amazon's recent efforts to bolster its delivery capabilities to rural communities . William Blair also highlighted Leo's broad range of internal use cases at Amazon, particularly across its fulfillment and logistics network. Analysts believe Leo's connectivity could be useful for Amazon's delivery vehicles in rural areas with limited cellular coverage. They said Leo could also serve as a primary or backup connectivity at Amazon's fulfillment centers and grocery stores, which could "potentially drive cost savings and margin expansion across its businesses." The firm further noted growth opportunities with Prime Air, Amazon's drone delivery service, in areas where access to ground delivery may be more challenging. The bottom line Amazon is still far away from realizing its full space ambitions, and doing so will likely require much more funding in the future. But buying Globalstar is a smart move that underscores the company's commitment to satellite connectivity, which will keep the Amazon flywheel humming in the coming years. We continue to maintain our 1-rating on Amazon and a $250 price target on the stock. Amazon reports first-quarter results Wednesday night. (Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust is long AMZN, AAPL. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
G
Gemini by Google
▬ Neutral

"Amazon is trading short-term margin stability for long-term spectrum control, a high-stakes gamble that hinges entirely on winning the Direct-to-Device infrastructure war against SpaceX."

The Globalstar acquisition is a strategic defensive play to secure spectrum sovereignty, but investors should be wary of the capital intensity here. While the narrative centers on synergy with AWS and Prime, the reality is that Amazon is entering a brutal, hardware-heavy arms race against SpaceX, which already has a massive head start in launch cadence and orbital density. With Amazon’s free cash flow already under pressure from AI infrastructure spend, this $11.6 billion outlay adds significant execution risk. Unless Leo achieves rapid commercial scale by 2027, this becomes a multi-year drag on margins that the core retail business may struggle to offset.

Devil's Advocate

If Amazon successfully integrates Globalstar’s spectrum to dominate the Direct-to-Device market, they effectively bypass the gatekeepers of global telecommunications, creating a proprietary moat that makes their cloud and retail ecosystems untouchable in remote regions.

G
Grok by xAI
▼ Bearish

"The Globalstar acquisition amplifies Amazon's capex burden and FCF risks without credible near-term revenue to offset Leo's chronic delays and Starlink's dominance."

Amazon's $11.6B Globalstar buy—38x its ~$300M 2025 revenue—piles onto Leo's $10B+ prior capex commitment amid AI-driven FCF turning negative in 2026 after a 71% drop to $11.2B last year. With just 240 satellites launched versus Starlink's 10,000+ and 10M users at $10-11B run-rate, Leo lags years behind; Amazon's FCC extension request for its stalled 1,600-sat mandate underscores execution risks. Spectrum aids D2D from 2028, but SpaceX's $17B EchoStar spectrum grab and T-Mobile pact intensify rivalry. Synergies with AWS/Prime are speculative, unlikely to move the needle on $800B revenue soon.

Devil's Advocate

Leo could leverage AWS's enterprise moat for $100B opportunity and bundle with 200M Prime users, turning rural connectivity into retail/cloud flywheel gains that justify the modest deal size.

C
Claude by Anthropic
▬ Neutral

"The Globalstar acquisition is strategically rational but financially risky given Amazon's deteriorating cash position and dual capital-intensive bets on AI and satellite infrastructure."

The Globalstar deal is strategically sound but financially stretched. Amazon is paying ~$11.6B for a company generating <$300M revenue—a 39x sales multiple—justified primarily by spectrum licenses and D2D capability acceleration. The real value isn't Globalstar's current business; it's optionality: bundling Leo with Prime, internal logistics automation, and enterprise AWS cross-sell. However, the article buries a critical risk: Amazon's free cash flow fell 71% YoY to $11.2B in 2025, and the company projects negative FCF in 2026 due to AI capex. Adding $11.6B in acquisition debt while burning cash on dual mega-projects (AI infrastructure + Leo buildout) creates refinancing risk if growth disappoints or rates stay elevated. The article treats this as a rounding error against $800B revenue; it isn't.

Devil's Advocate

Amazon is already capital-constrained and burning cash; layering an $11.6B acquisition on top of negative FCF guidance and massive AI spending could force asset sales or equity dilution if macro deteriorates. Starlink's 10,000+ satellites and 10M+ users represent an insurmountable first-mover advantage that spectrum licenses alone cannot overcome.

C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▬ Neutral

"Leo's long-run value hinges on an improbable, multi-year execution path that may never materialize at the scale required to justify the upfront $11.6B spend."

Amazon is betting big on Leo by buying Globalstar for $11.6B to accelerate D2D and spectrum access, aiming to launch commercial broadband in 2026 and gear up for 7,700 future satellites. The upside is AWS-linked sales, government/enterprise contracts, and a moat against Starlink. The downside is the valuation premium for a program with uncertain near-term revenue, substantial capex, and long lead times; regulatory and integration risks around a spectrum-based business; and Starlink's entrenched scale. The article glosses over the difficulty of monetizing D2D at enterprise/consumer levels, plus the risk that accelerated capex worsens free cash flow before any meaningful Leo contribution.

Devil's Advocate

Even if the deal closes, Leo’s revenue and profits may remain years away, and the Globalstar tie-up could be a misdirection if spectrum access doesn’t unlock scalable, profitable D2D services.

The Debate
G
Gemini ▲ Bullish
Responding to Claude
Disagrees with: Gemini Grok Claude ChatGPT

"The acquisition is a strategic play to own the industrial connectivity backbone, making traditional FCF metrics secondary to long-term infrastructure dominance."

Claude, you’re right about the FCF crunch, but everyone is ignoring the 'Amazon-as-a-Utility' endgame. This isn't about selling satellite internet; it’s about sovereign infrastructure. By controlling the spectrum and the hardware, Amazon creates a proprietary 'last mile' that circumvents traditional telcos entirely. If they can integrate this into AWS Private 5G for industrial automation, the valuation multiples become irrelevant because they’ve captured the enterprise backbone, not just consumer broadband.

G
Grok ▼ Bearish
Responding to Gemini
Disagrees with: Gemini

"Globalstar's narrowband S-band spectrum cannot support high-throughput enterprise utility without lengthy regulatory refarming."

Gemini, your utility endgame overlooks Globalstar's spectrum constraints: its 2 MHz S-band is narrowband for IoT/D2D (data rates ~10 kbps), woefully inadequate for AWS Private 5G's multi-Gbps industrial needs. Broadband refarming demands FCC approvals amid pending challenges, likely 2-3 years out. This isn't sovereignty—it's a spectrum mismatch that hands Starlink's Ka/Ku broadband moat intact, worsening Leo's capex bleed.

C
Claude ▬ Neutral
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"Globalstar's narrowband D2D isn't a dead-end; it's a near-term revenue bridge that funds Leo's broadband buildout and justifies the valuation if executed within 18-24 months."

Grok's spectrum constraint is real, but misses Amazon's actual play: Globalstar's narrowband isn't the endgame—it's the *bridge*. D2D at 10 kbps unlocks IoT logistics, supply-chain tracking, and Prime last-mile optimization immediately, generating revenue while Leo's broadband satellites mature. That's not sovereign infrastructure; it's cash-generative optionality. The FCC refarming risk is valid, but Amazon's lobbying power and AWS enterprise relationships make approval likelier than Grok implies. Timing matters more than spectrum purity here.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
Responding to Claude
Disagrees with: Claude

"Financing and execution risk could erode any optionality value, turning the Globalstar deal into a drag rather than a strategic moat."

Claude's focus on optionality misses the leverage stress test. Even with 'bridge' revenue from D2D, the 11.6B Globalstar bid compounds Amazon's already heavy capex and pushes negative FCF into 2026–27. If growth disappoints or rates stay higher for longer, refinancing risk and potential equity dilution become tangible headwinds, not a magic moat. The real friction isn't the idea of spectrum—it’s whether finance and integration can unlock acceptable returns.

Panel Verdict

No Consensus

The panel is divided on Amazon's Globalstar acquisition, with concerns about capital intensity, execution risks, and spectrum constraints, but also seeing strategic value and potential synergies.

Opportunity

Potential for strategic synergies with AWS and Prime, and the possibility of capturing the enterprise backbone with proprietary 'last mile' infrastructure.

Risk

Significant capital intensity and execution risks, including potential drag on margins and negative free cash flow.

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This is not financial advice. Always do your own research.