New York, May 13, 2026, 07:04 EDT
- EchoStar shares ticked up premarket after the FCC signed off on about $40 billion in spectrum sales to AT&T and SpaceX, clearing away a persistent regulatory hurdle and paving the way for the deal to wrap up.
- This isn’t only a cash play. Some traders now view EchoStar as something of a SpaceX proxy, and prediction markets remain firmly tilted toward a SpaceX IPO before year-end.
- The bear story hasn’t disappeared. EchoStar is letting go of important spectrum, its traditional TV and broadband units keep shrinking, and the FCC has slapped on a $2.4 billion escrow requirement.
EchoStar shares climbed Wednesday morning after the FCC signed off on the company’s proposed spectrum deals with AT&T and SpaceX. According to Public.com, SATS was trading at $134.74 as of 7:00 a.m. Eastern—up 4.14% from its $129.38 finish on Tuesday. Sherwood previously reported a premarket jump of over 7%.
It comes down to a straightforward but crucial point. With FCC sign-off, EchoStar no longer faces a Washington snag on its biggest asset sale. AT&T is set to acquire roughly 50 MHz of national spectrum for $23 billion, while SpaceX will pick up about 65 MHz for $17 billion—fuel for Starlink’s direct-to-device ambitions.
The narrative for the stock shifts here. EchoStar isn’t behaving much like a classic cable-and-satellite company anymore—it’s acting like a play on spectrum value, deleveraging, and maybe the potential for future SpaceX involvement. With the approval, investors now see a clearer path from announcement to a closed deal, explaining why the chart moved premarket.
But there’s a snag. The FCC is forcing EchoStar to set up a $2.4 billion escrow account, enough to pay out any valid claims linked to license-related disputes. EchoStar acknowledged the green light, yet criticized what it called an “unprecedented involuntary escrow condition,” adding it’s weighing its options. fiercewireless.com
It’s a much clearer bull story now. EchoStar lands a way to turn spectrum into cash, eases pressure on its balance sheet, and keeps Boost Mobile afloat via a hybrid MVNO setup. The company also keeps a leveraged tie to SpaceX’s upcoming chapter. For context: a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) sells wireless service over someone else’s network, instead of operating its own infrastructure.
Bears don’t mince words. EchoStar’s letting go of valuable wireless spectrum it once counted on for its 5G plans. TipRanks calls it a pivot—pulling back from trying to squeeze revenue out of those licenses directly. Now, investors are left wondering: once AT&T and SpaceX get that spectrum, what’s left to power long-term growth?
The numbers tell a cautious story. For the first quarter, EchoStar’s revenue slipped to $3.67 billion, down from $3.87 billion the previous year. Pay-TV subscribers were down by around 366,000, and broadband shed about 58,000 customers. Net loss improved—narrowing to $146.9 million. No live conference call this quarter, so investors were left with the figures and little else from management.
The quiet is notable: EchoStar is in the middle of a pivot. Craig Moffett at MoffettNathanson summed it up bluntly this year, calling EchoStar’s move “transitioning from being an operating company to being a hedge fund.” That stings, but the description tracks with what’s happening—shareholders now focus less on Dish TV churn, more on capital allocation fights and SpaceX exposure. Light Reading
Prediction market data points to the move. Over on Polymarket’s SpaceX board, traders pegged a 95% chance that SpaceX would go public by December 31. Another SpaceX IPO contract priced in the same 95% probability that the company would close with a valuation north of $1 trillion. While these aren’t certainties, they offer a window into why EchoStar’s stock carries an extra SpaceX premium, above what its own numbers suggest.
Telecom stocks tell a mixed story here. AT&T picks up more mid-band and low-band spectrum for both 5G and home internet offerings. On the flip side, Verizon and T-Mobile now contend with a better-funded rival on spectrum, with AT&T bulking up and SpaceX stepping up its satellite-to-phone ambitions. Fierce Network highlighted AT&T’s earlier move: using special FCC authority, it rolled out EchoStar’s 3.45 GHz spectrum at 23,000 sites—lifting download speeds as much as 80% across the country, FCC data show.
SpaceX just got the green light, adding momentum to its broader ambitions. According to Reuters, the company is eyeing a June IPO, aiming to pull in up to $75 billion with a valuation around $1.75 trillion. At the same time, SpaceX is on the hunt for new spaceport sites to ramp up Starship launches.
EchoStar’s surge isn’t just about relief—there are strings attached. The FCC cleared a big hurdle, but a cash reserve remains, legal issues linger, and the main business is still shrinking as customers keep walking. Bulls point to a tidier SpaceX tie-in and the potential for capital returns. Bears, on the other hand, argue the stock has already baked in plenty of optimism, well before any payout shows up.