Singapore investors’ SpaceX investment in the space economy

Singapore investors’ SpaceX investment in the space economy


The Republic’s push into space as a promising economic arena also gives local dimension to the investment theme

[SINGAPORE] Everyone is eager to climb onto the SpaceX bandwagon now, but Singapore-based technology entrepreneur and investor Lim Qing Ru had her eye on it as a promising investment back in 2021.

The founding partner of venture capital firm True Global Ventures 4 said that by Q2 2021, SpaceX had shifted from being a daring venture to being the world’s only provider of operational reusable rockets, effectively commanding about 60 per cent of the global commercial launch market.

For her, investing in SpaceX gives exposure to a sector that is still at an early stage: “We truly believe that the space economy is just at the very beginning of its story.”

Lim said the investment case became clear when SpaceX’s reusable launch capability was viewed in the context of the rapidly expanding satellite network of Starlink, SpaceX’s satellite Internet business that is laying the groundwork for global connectivity.

The Musk factor

And then when she factored in founder Elon Musk’s track record of “turning the impossible into the inevitable”, she gained confidence to invest.

Another investor Ho Kheng Lian, general partner in investment firm Turn Capital, told The Business Times that she had invested in SpaceX about a decade ago, when its valuation was about US$16 billion. The company’s market capitalisation is now a whopping US$2.4 trillion. 

At that time, SpaceX stood out to her because it had a large market opportunity, a clear technology advantage and a management team capable of executing an ambitious plan.

“If SpaceX succeeded, it would not have simply become another aerospace company; it had the potential to fundamentally alter the economics of access to space,” she said.

“Opportunities where success can reshape an industry are rare, and they often produce outcomes that are disproportionate to the initial investment.”

Still a high-risk zone

Still, the space economy remains a high-risk area.

Space-linked companies are capital-intensive, technically complex and highly competitive. Many space-related business models are also still being tested, and it is not a given that every company with strong technology would build a sustainable commercial business.




Read Full Article At Source

Share. Save. Don't Miss The Buzz: XFacebookRedditLINETelegramWhatsAppGmail