New York, May 16, 2026, 15:02 EDT
EchoStar Corp (SATS.O) closed out last week up 7.9% after regulators cleared its spectrum agreements with SpaceX and AT&T. Shares ended Friday at $137.23, up 1.6% for the day. EchoStar stock advanced each session last week, company data showed.
U.S. markets are shut for the weekend. Nasdaq trading will start up again Monday at 9:30 a.m. Eastern and close at 4 p.m. Regular trading runs Monday to Friday. The next U.S. stock market holiday is Memorial Day, May 25.
Why it matters now: EchoStar got the regulatory go-ahead on its spectrum deal, taking it out of straight-up distress territory for now. But the stock isn’t in the clear yet. The next week is a test—does the FCC approval hold investor interest, or does attention snap back to the details on escrow and looming debt deadlines?
A rally stood out as the broader market slumped. Wall Street fell Friday—Dow shed 1.07%, S&P 500 dropped 1.24%, and the Nasdaq Composite slid 1.54%. “The market had gotten way ahead of itself,” Kenny Polcari, chief market strategist at Slatestone Wealth, told Reuters. Reuters
FCC approval on Tuesday kicked things off. EchoStar won clearance to sell about 65 megahertz of spectrum to SpaceX and another 50 megahertz to AT&T. Spectrum is the radio space for mobile signals. The FCC said the two sales, worth more than $40 billion combined, would put around 115 megahertz of mostly unused spectrum to work.
The FCC gave the green light, tying the deal to direct-to-device (D2D) service that skips cell towers and links phones or devices straight to satellites. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr told Reuters this gives Starlink a path into the “direct to cell market,” adding regulators are “fundamentally reshaping the wireless industry.” Reuters
But there are still obstacles. EchoStar needs to create a $2.4 billion escrow account to protect against potential claims tied to tower owners, contractors and other infrastructure partners. The company labeled this requirement as an “unprecedented involuntary escrow.” EchoStar is “evaluating next steps,” Fierce Network reported. Fierce Network
Analyst views on the catch are split. Blair Levin, policy analyst at New Street Research, said “odds favor no further litigation” over the transfer. But LightShed Partners’ Walter Piecyk and Joe Galone wrote they doubted this was “the last word from Ergen,” referring to EchoStar Chairman Charlie Ergen. Light Reading
EchoStar’s first-quarter results were light on positives. Revenue came in at $3.67 billion, down from $3.87 billion. Net loss narrowed to $146.9 million, after last year’s $202.7 million loss. The company shed about 366,000 pay-TV subscribers in the quarter, gained 16,000 wireless subscribers, and lost 58,000 broadband subscribers.
EchoStar’s shares aren’t as much about Dish TV or Sling right now, but about what’s next for the company after its spectrum sale. The old pay-TV problems are still there, just not the main story for investors at the moment.
But the risk is still there. EchoStar’s 10-Q listed $1.516 billion in cash and marketable securities at March 31, but the company faces major 2026 debt maturities. It could also have to pay up to $2.921 billion in case of an AWS-3 re-auction. The filing put “substantial doubt” on EchoStar’s ability to keep operating as a going concern—an accounting warning around meeting its debt if deals don’t close. SEC
Deal activity is gaining steam. Two days after EchoStar’s green light, the FCC cleared Verizon’s $1 billion spectrum purchase from U.S. Cellular. Carr told Reuters that scale matters in connectivity, and regulators want more deals and auctions.
EchoStar may point to an escrow fight next week, with investors looking for any new info on what the AT&T and SpaceX transfers will look like when they close. Traders are also watching to see if the stock holds on to its run after climbing for five days. That could take more than a single filing to answer. News could land Monday morning.