AST SpaceMobile stock is slipping and Amazon may be to blame

AST SpaceMobile stock is slipping and Amazon may be to blame
Wajeeh Khan
15 Apr 2026, 06:15 AM

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AST SpaceMobile (ASTS)

Buy ASTS. The stock sold off on Amazon/Globalstar headlines, but ASTS still has the only pure-play direct-to-device path with a $1B committed revenue backlog and a technical moat (high-throughput array). The Apr. 16 BlueBird 7 launch is a near-term binary catalyst that can re-rate execution risk and pull forward carrier confidence after the brief schedule slip.

Key Risk: BlueBird 7 underperforms or slips again, confirming execution fragility and collapsing the re-rating catalyst.

Globalstar (GSAT)

Sell GSAT. The Amazon deal is a strategic threat to independent satellite operators: spectrum/infrastructure absorption and bundling into Amazon’s Leo network compress GSAT’s standalone value and likely shifts economics away from legacy partners.

Key Risk: Regulatory/contractual constraints force Amazon to keep GSAT’s assets economically independent longer than expected, limiting value transfer and reducing downside.

  • Amazon announces an $11.6 billion deal to acquire Globalstar.
  • Here's why the agreement may prove a threat for ASTS stock.
  • AST SpaceMobile shares are currently up some 20% in April.

AST SpaceMobile Inc (NASDAQ: ASTS) closed “meaningfully” lower on Tuesday after Amazon announced a definitive $11.6 billion deal to acquire peer satellite operator Globalstar.

The news eclipsed ASTS’s recent operational triumphs, including record-breaking Q4 revenue that helped it break above its major moving averages (MAs) in early April.

Versus its year-to-date high, AST SpaceMobile stock is down more than 25% at the time of writing.

Why Amazon-Globalstar deal may be a threat for ASTS stock

ASTS shares must now navigate a strategic pincer movement.

By absorbing GSAT’s licensed L-band spectrum and operational infrastructure, Amazon.com Inc is positioning its “Leo” network to offer immediate direct-to-device (D2D) services.

And more threatening perhaps is its confirmed alliance with Apple, which intends to power satellite connectivity for the iPhone ecosystem.

Unlike AST SpaceMobile, which must secure individual carrier wins, AMZN can now leverage its existing infrastructure to bundle satellite connectivity with Prime, AWS, and retail distribution at a global scale.

This “bundle-and-conquer” strategy may prove a major headwind for ASTS’s ability to command premium pricing.

While it maintains a technical edge with a huge, high-throughput spacecraft array, the Amazon-Globalstar deal creates a formidable rival capable of subsidizing hardware to lock in market share.

Why else are AST SpaceMobile shares slipping today

While the Amazon-Globalstar merger dominated headlines, several other factors pressured ASTS’ valuation on Tuesday.

These include a classic “sell the news” reaction; the company reported a more than 25x year-over-year increase in revenue to $54.3 million in Q4, but the market had already priced it in during the month-to-date rally.

Further dampening sentiment on AST SpaceMobile shares was a “minor” launch schedule slippage for the critical BlueBird 7 mission. Originally slated for earlier in the week, the shift to an Apr. 16 target date on Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket triggered technical profit-taking.

For a high-beta stock, even a 48-hour delay prompts de-risking from investors wary of the “binary” execution risks inherent in satellite deployment.

Should you buy the dip in AST SpaceMobile Inc?

For long-term believers, this pullback may represent a strategic “entry point”, as AST SpaceMobile remains one of the few pure-plays in the direct-to-cell market with a $1 billion committed revenue backlog.

However, caution is warranted. Despite the massive revenue beat, a wider-than-expected $0.26 per share loss, and a high beta of 2.8, it suggests volatility is here to stay.

In short, the Amazon-Globalstar deal introduces a “Prime-sized” threat, but ASTS stock’s technical moat and upcoming Apr. 16 BlueBird 7 launch offer immediate catalysts.

With analyst price targets ranging widely from $41 to $139, the “buy the dip” thesis rests entirely on whether AST SpaceMobile can maintain its first-mover advantage before Leo’s commercial scale fully materializes.

Wall Street currently rates the Midland-headquartered firm at “hold” only.