The upper stage of a Falcon 9 rocket deploys a stack of Starlink “V2 Mini” satellites in orbit on Feb. 27, 2028.
SpaceX
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk announced on Thursday that the company’s Starlink satellite internet business “achieved breakeven cash flow.”
“Excellent work by a great team,” Musk said in a post on his social media platform, X.
Musk did not specify whether that milestone was hit on an operating basis, or for a specified time period.
Earlier this year, SpaceX President and Chief Operating Officer Gwynne Shotwell said that Starlink “had a cash flow positive quarter” in 2022, and the overall SpaceX company reportedly turned a profit in the first quarter of 2023.
SpaceX’s valuation has soared to about $150 billion, with Starlink seen as a key economic driver of the company’s goals. Two years ago, Musk emphasized that making Starlink “financially viable” required crossing “through a deep chasm of negative cash flow.”
Musk has discussed spinning off Starlink to take it public through an IPO once the business was “in a smooth sailing situation.” But timing of a Starlink IPO remains uncertain. Last year, Musk told employees that taking the business public wasn’t likely until 2025 or later.
“Being public is definitely an invitation to pain,” Musk told SpaceX employees in 2022. “And the stock price is just distracting.”
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Starlink is the global communications network that Musk’s company has been building, with more than 5,000 satellites launched and counting.
It began offering Starlink service about three years ago, initially targeting the consumer market. Most recently, SpaceX has said Starlink has upward of two million subscribers, having expanded into other markets — including national security, enterprise, mobility, maritime and aviation — and disrupted the existing satellite communications sector.
Last month SpaceX announced the opening of a new satellite antenna manufacturing facility in Bastrop, Texas, which is near Austin.