Every week Elon Musk is sending about 60 more satellites into orbit.

Tech legend Jeff Brown believes he’s building what will be the world’s first global communications carrier.

He predicts this will be Elon’s next trillion-dollar business.

And when it goes public, you could cash out with the biggest payout of your life.

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A Clearer Picture of What’s Being Built

The past two weeks offered one of the clearest signals yet that satellite connectivity is crossing the line from experiment to infrastructure. SpaceX’s launch tempo remains unmatched: Transporter-15 lifted 140 payloads on November 26, effectively acting as a global bus route for small-satellite operators. That mission arrived just days after Sentinel-6B was placed into orbit for U.S. and European partners, and another set of Starlink batches added more than 50 satellites to the constellation in under a week.

This pace isn’t for show — it’s meant to keep the system growing.

Every additional orbital plane enlarges the foundation for something more consequential: the ability to route communications around the world without relying on terrestrial networks. That capability is no longer theoretical. It’s beginning to surface in markets where reliability carries a different weight.

The biggest milestone came from Ukraine’s Kyivstar, which on November 24 activated Starlink’s Direct-to-Cell service for more than 22 million subscribers. The initial phase supports SMS only, but it provides a fallback communication layer immune to infrastructure loss — an advantage no land-based carrier can fully replicate. Days later, Belgian provider Proximus announced its own partnership, suggesting early momentum across Europe.

Not every part of SpaceX’s ecosystem is accelerating. Starship is entering a scheduled pause until February 2026 while tower upgrades are completed at Starbase. But in practical terms, that pause highlights something else: even while its most ambitious vehicle is temporarily grounded, the company’s operational footprint continues expanding.

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A Shift Carriers Can’t Ignore

The activation of Direct-to-Cell marks a turning point for the telecom sector. Until recently, satellite connectivity required specialized hardware, costly terminals, or narrow-band emergency links. That boundary is dissolving. By using existing LTE spectrum and unmodified smartphones, this new layer bypasses traditional bottlenecks — including physical towers and regional outages — and creates a second path for communication that is always overhead.

For carriers, this introduces a new competitive dynamic. If subscribers expect seamless backup coverage, operators without a satellite partner may face pressure to secure one. The rapid follow-on from Proximus indicates that early adopters are less concerned with experimental capability and more focused on strategic positioning.

Meanwhile, the launch market itself is shifting. Blue Origin’s successful recovery of its New Glenn booster on November 13 didn’t dethrone SpaceX, but it did end an era. For the first time, customers have a second operational option for reusable heavy lift. Competition at this level rarely reduces demand; instead, it accelerates the pace of development and diversifies access to orbit.

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What Deserves Attention Now

Taken together, the developments of November suggest that the next phase of satellite communication will look less like a novelty and more like a public utility. The distinction isn’t about technology — it’s about consistency, coverage, and integration into everyday systems.

If Direct-to-Cell continues expanding through Europe and reaches broader rollout in 2026, it could redefine what “network coverage” means. And if reusable launch becomes a two-player market, the downstream effects will reach everything built on top of those rockets: cloud infrastructure, defense systems, logistics networks, and the consumer devices that increasingly depend on persistent connectivity.

SpaceX may no longer be alone, but its momentum remains the organizing force of the sector. The companies preparing for this new phase aren’t responding to hype — they’re responding to infrastructure that is finally robust enough to support global-scale communication.

Written by Deniss Slinkins
Global Financial Journal

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