Today: 12 July 2026
Starship Flight 13 Lifts Off as Wall Street Watches for 5,000 Launches

Starship Flight 13 Lifts Off as Wall Street Watches for 5,000 Launches

Starbase, Texas, July 12, 2026, 08:10 (CDT)

SpaceX plans to run Starship’s 13th flight test on Thursday, July 16, after firing all 33 Super Heavy engines in a full-duration static fire that left the booster bolted to the pad. The 90-minute launch window starts at 5:45 p.m. CDT. Investors will be watching closely after a tough week for the stock.

U.S. markets are shut Sunday. SpaceX last traded Friday at $145.30, off 4.5% for the day and 10.3% since the July 2 close. The Nasdaq Composite added 1.7% for the week. That puts about 12 points between SpaceX and the index, so traders are watching for news on the stock when it reopens Monday.

The payload on Flight 13 is more commercially focused than in past Starship tests. The plan is for the upper stage to deploy 20 Starlink V3 satellites, each built for downlink speeds of one terabit per second. That totals a designed capacity of 20 Tbps on this mission.

Payload benchmarkV3 satellitesDesigned downlink capacityVersus a Falcon 9 batch
Flight 13 target2020 TbpsRoughly 6.7 times
Full Starship designUp to 60Up to 60 Tbps20 times
Falcon 9 equivalentAbout 3 Tbps1 time

The 6.7-times and 3-Tbps numbers come from SpaceX’s stated 60-satellite, 20-times benchmark. These calculations assume capacity climbs in step with the number of V3 satellites. SpaceX hasn’t given forecasts for these figures.

Chief Financial Officer Bret Johnsen said every Starship launch taking up satellites holds “20 times the capability” of a Falcon launch. Flight 13 is sending up about a third of the full planned V3 load, meaning a successful run will check some of the capacity claims. The launch won’t show the total payload or rapid reuse yet. SEC

SpaceX’s vertical integration gives it an edge Amazon.com can’t match across the whole line. Amazon’s Leo broadband network had 394 satellites in orbit as of July 2 and aims to kick off initial service later this year, but the company uses external launchers like United Launch Alliance, Arianespace and SpaceX. Amazon has around 100 launch contracts lined up, worth at least $82 billion, according to Reuters.

The noise from Friday’s engine test rattled South Padre Island and nearby towns, according to Brownsville officials. Authorities are setting up a safety perimeter and will shut down Highway 4 and Boca Chica Beach for Thursday’s launch window. The shaking isn’t about rocket output but signals the tension and pushback locally as test counts go up.

Flight 12 on May 22 put SpaceX’s design differences on display. The upper stage dropped dummy satellites as planned and ditched safely in the Indian Ocean. Super Heavy, though, lost control on the way back and crashed into the Gulf of Mexico. The FAA called for a mishap probe, saying nobody was hurt and no property was hit.

The cadence gap is wider than the gap in payload. Flight 12 is 55 days away from the July 16 goal, putting the annualized pace at about 6.6 launches a year. Broker forecasts from Reuters see anywhere from 1,500 to around 5,000 Starship launches a year by 2031. That depends on how much reuse SpaceX can get. “There’s nervousness about expectations being too high,” Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide, said. Reuters

Cadence benchmarkLaunches a yearLaunches a dayMultiple of current 55-day test pace
Current annualized rate6.60.021 time
UBS 2031 projectionMore than 1,500Over 4.1Over 226 times
Bernstein 2031 projection3,5009.6527 times
Wells Fargo 2031 projection4,60012.6693 times
J.P. Morgan 2031 projectionAround 5,00013.7About 753 times

The comparison isn’t apples to apples—development tests are supposed to be slower than flights from a seasoned fleet. Still, it shows the speed SpaceX must hit to churn out vehicles, turn launch pads around, and make reuse work. CFRA’s Keith Snyder, who rates the stock sell with a $115 price target, told Business Insider he’s waiting for “growth actually [to] begin to materialize.” Business Insider

A flawless Flight 13 wouldn’t show Starship can carry 60 satellites, turn around boosters quickly, or handle thousands of launches each year. Any new flub—hardware, regulatory, or just bad weather—could push back V3 and keep Starlink tied to the smaller-load Falcon 9. SpaceX flagged in its prospectus that redesigns, supply issues and unexpected glitches could push Starship’s schedule back and slow its satellite refresh.

This week, investors are focused on four numbers: 20 planned satellite deployments, one engine relight in space, two controlled ocean splashdowns, and then the countdown to Flight 14. The first three will show if Flight 13 does its job. The last will test if Wall Street’s favorite timing bets hold up.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

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