The City of London woke up to a new financial gravity this morning. SpaceX, Elon Musk’s privately held rocket company, has reportedly triggered a market event so significant that the Competition and Markets Authority has signalled a formal review. This is not mere regulatory box ticking. This is the sound of a sector being ripped apart and reassembled in orbit.
For years, SpaceX has been the unlisted star in the private equity constellation, valued at a staggering $180 billion. But the catalyst for this regulatory intervention is the company’s Starlink division, which provides satellite internet to remote corners of the globe. The CMA is now questioning whether SpaceX’s vertical integration and market dominance could stifle competition in the UK’s nascent space economy.
Let’s be blunt: this is about capital flight and market efficiency. The space sector has traditionally been a preserve of government contracts and lumbering defence primes. SpaceX has changed that equation. It has slashed launch costs by a factor of ten, disrupting the pricing power of legacy operators like Arianespace and United Launch Alliance. For investors, this is a classic Schumpeterian gale. But for regulators, it raises a fundamental question: can a single private entity control the entire value chain from launch to broadband?
The CMA’s intervention is a shot across the bows. It signals that the UK is not prepared to let a US company dominate a critical digital infrastructure asset without scrutiny. Remember, Starlink already holds a UK licence. If it expands its user base here, it could become an essential facility. And essential facilities attract regulation.
The financial implications are profound. If the CMA imposes conditions on SpaceX’s UK operations or forces structural separation, it could set a precedent for other regulators. The European Union is watching. Japan is watching. This could trigger a wave of anti-trust actions against Big Tech’s space ambitions, from Amazon’s Project Kuiper to OneWeb.
But here is the cynic’s view. The CMA’s bark is often worse than its bite. This review may end with a few slapped wrists and a commitment to open access. The real action is in the bond markets. Gilt yields are already edging higher on the news, as traders price in the possibility of a regulatory drag on a high-growth sector. If the CMA actually blocks or delays Starlink’s UK roll-out, expect capital to flow elsewhere. The space sector is global. Capital is mobile.
What does this mean for the UK taxpayer? The government has bet big on becoming a space hub, with investments in the Spaceport in Cornwall and the UK Space Agency. This review could either reassure or deter private capital. If SpaceX decides the UK is too hostile, it will take its satellites elsewhere. And that would be a disaster for the government’s levelling-up agenda.
The bottom line is this: the market has priced in a high-growth trajectory for SpaceX. Any regulatory friction will compress that valuation. But the bigger risk is a 'race to the bottom' where regulators compete to attract space companies with light touch oversight. That is a recipe for a race to the bottom, not a race to the stars.
In the short term, volatility is the only certainty. Starlink’s initial public offering, if it comes, will be a bellwether for the sector. The CMA must tread carefully. Ripping up the market structure could do more harm than good. After all, the invisible hand of the market got us to the moon. The heavy hand of regulation might keep us stuck on the launch pad.










