Astra — the FedEx of space — is going public through a merger with Holicity

Looking to send something to space? Astra, the company looking to become the Fedex of Space, can help with that.
On Feb. 2, Astra announced its plans to go public by merging with SPAC, Holicity — which values Astra at $2.1b.
In recent years, a drop in the cost of launching a rocket increased the potential business opportunities in space-related companies — sending companies on a rush to go after what could be the trillion-dollar space economy.
The momentum is now moving over to the public markets…
Cost was one of the biggest factors stopping the growth of space travel — but the cost to launch a satellite into space has fallen from $200m to ~$60m, and it could still drop as low as $5m… Astra is looking to bring this cost even further down…
Incorporated in 2016 and operating in secrecy for years, Astra builds smaller rockets that send satellites and smaller items to space. While companies like SpaceX are building 210 ft tall rockets, Astra focuses on building tiny rockets up to 40 ft tall that will make more frequent trips…
In Dec. 2020, Astra’s Rocket 3.2 made it to orbital space on a test flight — becoming the third privately funded US company to reach space, behind SpaceX and RocketLab.
Astra hasn’t made any money but has booked over $150m of launch revenue under contract — with customers including NASA and the Pentagon.
Space investors are undoubtedly making a big bet on the “potential” demand of space travel — which is highly uncertain — but Morgan Stanley believes there are reasons to buy into the industry:
With no historical financials, investors only have future forecasts to rely on. If actual results turn out lower than expected, these stocks can go down just as fast as they went up. For now, investors can only guess how profitable and big these businesses can become.