Whatās Going On Here?Virgin Galactic completed its next major test flight over the weekend, as the space tourism company doubles down on its battle for the stratosphere. What Does This Mean?The mission was the spacecraftās twenty-second test flight, but its first with a full crew. It also marked the first time a company founder has traveled on their own ship, with Richard Branson beating Amazonās Jeff Bezos ā who has his own midlife crisis-fueled space venture ā by eight days.
Both companies are trying to build businesses catering to fatcats whoāll pay top dollar for an unforgettable view of our planet. And those fatcats seem to be here for it: more than 600 of them have paid an average of $130,000 each for the chance to fly with Virgin Galactic, while another thousand have saved their spots with a $1,000 deposit (tweet this). Why Should I Care?For markets: Virgin Galactic flies too close to the sun. Virgin Galacticās shares ā which doubled in the lead-up to the weekendās test flight ā were up by as much as 10% before the market opened on Monday. The company was quick to capitalize on the jump, announcing that itād be selling $500 million worth of new shares to help fund its transition from test flights to full-blown commercial operations. But what goes up must come down, and with so many new shares on the market set to dilute the value of existing ones, investors sent its stock back down more than 10%.
Zooming in: Get ready for liftoff. Virgin Galactic said on Monday that it was planning to eventually have around 400 flights a year carrying six passengers each, which could ā according to investment research firm Alliance Bernstein ā end up costing between $400,000 and $500,000 a ticket. That implies up to $1.2 billion of annual sales once the firmās operations are fully up and running, which would be ā sigh ā out of this world. |