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Speaking Tuesday at Semafor World Economy in Washington, DC, Ekblaw said the hotly anticipated IPO, expected in June, will unlock new liquidity for space-enthusiast investors to fund a raft of new firms in the sector, joining with investors who missed out on Elon Musk’s SpaceX.
Ekblaw, an aerospace architect who also runs an affiliated VC fund, said space companies will touch every sector of the economy. Startups already are working on robotics and manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, even hospitality.
“Don’t consider space as a sector that may or may not be relevant to your business,” Ekblaw advised. “Space is an emerging market. It’s a physical domain around the Earth.”
Generating solar power in space could also be a way to reinforce an electric grid stretched by AI data centers, added Omeed Malik, founder and president of 1789 Capital and an investor in SpaceX.
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