NEW YORK, June 6, 2026, 11:03 EDT
- EchoStar slid 6.7% Friday, closing at $116.28. Shares lost 8.7% from where they finished Monday.
- The stock moves into next week with three key variables: SpaceX’s planned IPO, possible funds from AT&T spectrum, and a debt-payment grace period.
- The tone is weaker after U.S. indexes dropped Friday and the S&P 500 broke its nine-week win streak.
EchoStar shares start the week weaker. The stock tumbled Friday, leaving traders trying to balance hopes for SpaceX exposure with concerns about debt deadlines and closing the pending deal.
EchoStar shares ended at $116.28 on June 5, down from $124.64 in the previous session. Volume jumped to 9.7 million shares. EchoStar’s stock table lists a Monday close of $127.42, so the drop since then is about 8.7%.
EchoStar is trading as more than a satellite-TV and broadband company now. The stock is also picking up attention as a spectrum play, with spectrum being licensed airwaves for wireless. EchoStar is seen as a kind of public-market proxy for SpaceX as Elon Musk’s firm moves toward a big IPO, its first public share sale.
SpaceX is looking to set its IPO price at $135 per share and aims to raise $75 billion, targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation, Reuters said, citing sources. Morningstar put SpaceX’s valuation at $780 billion in a note out June 1, Reuters reported, saying much of that comes from Starlink, the satellite business.
EchoStar’s story ties back to the $40 billion in spectrum the FCC cleared last month. The FCC gave the green light for EchoStar to sell 50 megahertz of nationwide spectrum to AT&T for $23 billion and 65 megahertz to SpaceX for $17 billion. EchoStar, at the time, said it was looking at what it called an “unprecedented involuntary escrow condition.” Reuters
The cash is more than strategic. It is liquidity.
EchoStar said in a June 1 filing it did not make about $183 million of interest payments due that day on DISH DBS notes. That move triggered a default, but EchoStar said it is not yet an event of default because the company has a 30-day grace period. The company said it put off the payment as it waits for $20.25 billion in net closing proceeds from the AT&T transactions. Those deals got FCC and Justice Department approval, but FCC approval still needs to become final.
AT&T says it sees a clear benefit in pressing forward. The company said picking up EchoStar would give it around 50 MHz of low- and mid-band spectrum in nearly every U.S. market, and would make AT&T the main network-services partner for EchoStar’s Boost Mobile. That’s under a hybrid mobile network operator setup, so Boost can run customers on its own core tech and a rival’s towers.
EchoStar’s results for the first quarter showed a mixed picture. Revenue came in at $3.67 billion, down from $3.87 billion the year before. The company posted a net loss of $146.9 million. It lost around 366,000 pay-TV subscribers and about 58,000 broadband subscribers. Retail wireless subscribers edged higher by about 16,000.
EchoStar shares trade with pressure on the operating side, while spectrum and the chance of a SpaceX comp could move the stock soon. Simply Wall St said Saturday its DCF math lands at about $116.94 a share—roughly where the stock trades now. Its price-to-sales check puts EchoStar at a premium to the media group.
SpaceX’s listing could hit next week, Reuters said, adding to what is already shaping up to be a busy stretch for investors. Fresh consumer and producer price data are due, just after Friday’s jobs report raised fears of a tighter Fed. “The question mark surrounding it is whether it’s an indication of market froth,” Jason Pride, chief of investment strategy and research at Glenmede, told Reuters about the SpaceX IPO. Reuters
Competitive context can help or hurt. AT&T could add to its 5G spectrum, and SpaceX would get spectrum needed for Starlink’s device-to-device push—a satellite-to-phone service that may disrupt parts of wireless. EchoStar is keeping Boost alive but needs partners more than before.
Downside risk is clear. If the FCC order stalls, AT&T delays, SpaceX’s IPO underwhelms, or EchoStar can’t make its missed interest payment before the grace period closes, investor attention could swing back to leverage, falling pay-TV subs, and execution risk instead of spectrum upside.
EchoStar is set to open lower Monday, after the market cut the stock on Friday. It’s not clear yet if Friday’s drop was just a weak session or something bigger for the EchoStar trade heading into next week.