The Next Battle in Space Isn’t Launching Satellites. It’s Managing Them.

Disseminated on behalf of Planet Ventures Inc. (CSE: PXI) (OTC: PNXPF) and may include paid advertising.

  • SpaceX’s record June 2026 IPO put a public spotlight on space, yet most of the sector’s frontier companies remain private and out of reach for public investors
  • Antaris, a software-defined space infrastructure company backed by Planet Ventures, signed a memorandum of agreement with Transcelestial to develop and flight-test a combined surveillance and optical-communications architecture on its JANUS-2 mission in late 2026
  • Planet Ventures gives public-market investors exposure to private space companies such as Antaris, Relativity Space, and General Astronautics that are typically accessible only to venture and institutional capital

The biggest story in space this year did not happen in orbit. On June 12, 2026, SpaceX completed the largest initial public offering in history, pricing at $135 per share and debuting at a valuation approaching $1.8 trillion. For the first time, everyday investors could buy a direct stake in the company that drove launch costs lower and reshaped the economics of space.

Yet the listing also exposed a gap. SpaceX is now public, but many of the companies building the next layer of space economy remain private and largely inaccessible to public-market investors. While rockets captured the first chapter of commercial space development, the next phase is increasingly focused on software, communications, robotics, and the infrastructure required to manage rapidly growing networks of satellites and space-based systems.

Closing that gap is the strategy behind Planet Ventures Inc. (CSE: PXI) (OTC: PNXPF), an investment issuer focused on providing shareholders with exposure to private companies operating across multiple segments of the expanding space economy. One of those portfolio companies recently achieved a milestone that highlights where the industry may be heading next.

The Operating System for Space

Antaris, a private space technology company backed by Planet Ventures, is building a software-defined platform for designing, simulating, deploying, and operating satellite missions. Rather than focusing on a single spacecraft or payload, the company’s technology is intended to simplify how entire constellations are built and managed across multiple hardware providers and orbital environments.

The concept mirrors the evolution of cloud computing on Earth. As digital infrastructure became increasingly complex, software platforms emerged to simplify deployment, management, and scalability. Antaris is applying a similar approach to space operations, where satellite operators increasingly require flexible software capable of managing missions across diverse systems and suppliers.

Investors have taken notice. Antaris completed a $28 million Series A financing and counts investors including Lockheed Martin Ventures and WestWave Capital among its backers. The company’s mission is straightforward: make space infrastructure easier to build, deploy, and operate.

A Strategic Milestone for Antaris

That vision moved forward on May 6, 2026, when Antaris announced a memorandum of agreement with Transcelestial, a company developing advanced optical communications technology designed to move data between satellites at high speed.

Together, the companies plan to develop and demonstrate persistent intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (“ISR”) architecture integrated with high-throughput optical communications in low Earth orbit. The initiative is expected to be flight-validated aboard Antaris’ JANUS-2 mission, currently targeted for the fourth quarter of 2026.

The agreement highlights a broader shift underway across the space economy. The challenge is no longer simply putting sensors into orbit. Modern satellite networks must collect, process, transmit, and act upon enormous volumes of information in near real time. As constellations expand and applications become more sophisticated, software and communications infrastructure increasingly become the critical layer that enables everything else.

Optical communications have attracted growing interest because they can transmit significantly more data than traditional radio-frequency systems while reducing latency and improving security. Combined with persistent sensing capabilities, these technologies could support real-time decision-making across commercial, government, and defense applications.

For Antaris, the Transcelestial agreement represents validation that software-defined mission management and high-speed communications are becoming foundational components of next-generation space infrastructure.

A Different Way to Invest in the Space Economy

The SpaceX IPO reinforced a challenge many investors face: some of the most innovative companies in the industry remain private. Access is often limited to venture capital firms, institutional investors, and specialized private funds.

Planet Ventures has built its strategy around addressing that gap. Rather than operating a single technology business, the company invests across multiple segments of the space economy, including launch systems, mission-management software, orbital infrastructure, robotics, and emerging aerospace technologies.

Its portfolio includes investments in Antaris, General Astronautics, Mantis Space, and other developing space-focused businesses. Collectively, those investments provide exposure to multiple layers of the commercial space ecosystem rather than a single technology theme.

The opportunity is substantial. According to World Economic Forum estimates, the global space economy was valued at approximately $630 billion in 2025 and is projected to exceed $1.8 trillion by 2035. The Space Foundation estimates that commercial activity already accounts for roughly 78% of the sector, highlighting the growing role of private enterprise in shaping the future of space.

Building the Infrastructure Behind the Headlines

Space headlines often focus on rocket launches, lunar missions, and billionaire founders. SpaceX’s historic IPO fit squarely into that narrative. Yet history suggests that some of the most durable value creations occur in the infrastructure layer that enables those headline-grabbing achievements to scale.

As satellite deployments accelerate and mission complexity continues to increase, the platforms responsible for coordinating communications, operations, and decision-making may become as important to the space economy as operating systems are to personal computing.

The JANUS-2 mission remains ahead, and the companies within Planet Ventures’ portfolio are still executing early-stage growth strategies. Yet SpaceX’s public debut may have reinforced a simple reality: much of the next decade’s value creation in space is likely still occurring behind private-company doors. Planet Ventures’ strategy is built around gaining exposure to those opportunities before they become household names.

For more information, visit www.PlanetVenturesInc.com.

NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates relating to PNXPF are available in the company’s newsroom at https://ibn.fm/PNXPF

Disclaimer

Investor Brand Network (“We” or “Us”) are not securities dealers or brokers, investment advisers or financial advisers, and you should not rely on the information herein as investment advice. Planet Ventures Inc. will make aggregate payments of $100,000  to us to provide marketing services for a term of 1 year. This article is informational only and is solely for use by prospective investors in determining whether to seek additional information. This does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. Our stock profiles are intended to highlight certain companies for your further investigation; they are not stock recommendations or constitute an offer or sale of the referenced securities. The securities issued by the companies we profile should be considered high risk; if you do invest despite these warnings, you may lose your entire investment. Please do your own research before investing, including reading the companies’ SEDAR+ and SEC filings, press releases, and risk disclosures.

Forward-Looking Statements

This document contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities legislation. Such statements include, without limitation, statements regarding: Planet Ventures’ investment strategy and objectives; anticipated developments in the commercial space industry, including the growth of orbital energy and space robotics markets; the projected growth of the global space economy; Planet Ventures’ expectations regarding the strategic importance of its investments in Mantis Space and General Astronautics; the anticipated role of orbital energy technologies and robotic servicing systems in future in-orbit operations; and the potential for these technologies to become foundational to the next generation of commercial space activity.

Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this document are made as of the date hereof and Planet Ventures undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by applicable securities laws.

Risk Factors

Investing in Planet Ventures and its portfolio companies involves a high degree of risk. The following is a summary of key risk factors. This is not an exhaustive list, and additional risks may exist that are not currently known:

  • Early-Stage Investment Risk. Portfolio companies have limited operating histories and are pre-revenue. Investments are speculative and may result in a total loss of capital.
  • Technology Risk. The orbital energy and lunar habitation technologies underlying the Company’s investments are unproven at commercial scale and may not be successfully developed or deployed.
  • Regulatory Risk. Space sector operations require licenses and approvals from domestic and international regulatory bodies. Failure to obtain or maintain these could materially delay or prevent operations.
  • Market Risk. Commercial demand for in-space power systems and lunar services has not been established at scale. Projected market growth may not be realized within anticipated timeframes.
  • Liquidity Risk. Investments in private, early-stage companies are illiquid. There is no guarantee of a market for these securities or the ability to exit on favorable terms.
  • Capital Risk. Portfolio companies may require additional funding that may not be available, or may be available only on dilutive or restrictive terms.
  • Macroeconomic and Geopolitical Risk. Adverse macroeconomic conditions or geopolitical developments could disrupt the Company’s investment strategy or the operations of portfolio companies.
  • Key Personnel Risk. The Company’s performance depends in part on retaining key personnel and advisors. Loss of key individuals could adversely affect the Company’s operations and investment activities.

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