Settings

Theme

Starlink has achieved breakeven cash flow

twitter.com

111 points by arcadeparade 2 years ago · 204 comments

Reader

Difwif 2 years ago

I know a lot of people with access to fiber in cities discount Starlink and I miss my 1Gbps fiber. Also the Elon hate train probably has something to do with it.

Starlink is life changing for a lot of people. You would not believe how many different communities ISP market has been shaken up by Starlink. Many people went from high latency metered internet measured in kilobits to 100Mbps at 30ms. I've seen this both in the US and outside the US. Not mention previously unthinkable things like living on a sailboat and working remotely.

The biggest issue at this point is cost. It's mostly a premium product for high income people. I hope access gets cheaper as they scale. I think in general having a globally connected planet with high speed internet is going to make the world better (once we overcome the negative side effects of things like social media addiction)

  • progne 2 years ago

    It replaced not just my old slow DSL, but also my landline phone service. Every cent I was paying the small regional phone company now goes to Starlink, for usually about 20x the performance. The small regional telephone company did not sound happy about it when I left.

  • MagicMoonlight 2 years ago

    If I didn’t live in a city I would absolutely get one

dougmwne 2 years ago

Who knows what this even means. Breakeven including launch costs? Breakeven on only satellite operation costs? Breakeven when you exclude all satellite and ground infrastructure costs? Breakeven when you exclude all costs except Elon’s ego stroking expenses?

  • next_xibalba 2 years ago

    Likely Starlink operates as a distinct business unit, having its own financial statements (income, balance sheet, and cash flow). Breakeven means that the unit didn’t lose cash (but didn’t necessarily produce positive cash). Launch costs are very likely capitalized and amortized over the useful life of the equipment that was launched. Any costs hit cash flows as soon as invoices are paid, but is not recognized all at once on the income statement.

    Being cash flow positive is an extremely important milestone for a startup, but no, it doesn’t indicate profitability.

  • spikels 2 years ago

    Some background from Gwen Shotwell back in February[1]:

    > While Musk said in October that Starlink was losing money, Shotwell offered a more upbeat assessment. “This year Starlink will make money,” she said, noting that the company’s Falcon launch vehicle and Dragon spacecraft, and other unspecified work, already makes money.

    > “We actually had a cashflow positive quarter last year, excluding launch. This year, they’re paying for their own launches, and they will still make money,” she said.

    > She said cash flow from operations pays for development, supplemented as needed by outside investment. Tackling both Starlink and the Starship launch vehicle at the same time, she argued, drives that need for outside investment.

    > “If we had done Starlink and then Starship, or Starship and then Starlink, we probably could have funded them through customer contracts and revenue from Falcon and Dragon. But you do both of them at the same time it’s a lot of money every year.”

    Combining this with today’s statement I think we can answer your questions:

    > Breakeven including launch costs?

    Yes - cash flow breakeven for the Starlink business unit which includes it’s launch costs.

    > Breakeven on only satellite operation costs? Breakeven when you exclude all satellite and ground infrastructure costs? Breakeven when you exclude all costs except Elon’s ego stroking expenses?

    No to all these alternatives. But why the dumb ad hominem?

    [1] https://spacenews.com/shotwell-ukraine-weaponized-starlink-i...

  • juujian 2 years ago

    It definitely does not include the cost associated with polluting our atmosphere

    • Dylan16807 2 years ago

      Did you check any numbers before being so sure?

      Each launch burns about 120 tons of kerosene for about 360 tons of CO2.

      If we take this Nature study as accurate, a ton of CO2 has a societal cost of about $185. If we add that all up, it's $70k per launch? Let's round up to $100k per launch.

      Multiplied by launch count, that's only a few million dollars. They're still at breakeven when you include it.

  • bequanna 2 years ago

    It says right in the description: cash flow break even.

    This is not the same as some fiscal year net income calculation.

    Edit: fixed

fdaslkjlkjklj 2 years ago

For those who don't know, capital expenses are depreciated over their useful lifetime (for StarLink sats, estimated at 5 years) and aren't accounted for by cashflow.

Cash flow positive tells you they're not going to go broke, at least until they need more capital expenses (5 years...), which is a milestone, sure.

But profit is a better measure of a business's value as a going concern. What happens in 5 years when they can finance with interest rates at 5% and they have competition? I don't know... If they were profitable and could give returns investors needed, that would tell you they can survive.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 years ago

    > capital expenses are depreciated over their useful lifetime (for StarLink sats, estimated at 5 years) and aren't accounted for by cashflow

    This is incorrect. Cash flow is cash flow. Net income smooths capital expenditures. Cash flow does not. What that means is if you have a ten-year capital asset, year 0 cash flow will suck while year 1 will be exaggerated. (Starlink is currently in year 0 as it’s building out its constellation. Presumably, capex will fall when it’s in maintenance.)

  • ckdarby 2 years ago

    I get where this comment is coming from, but isn't it much more complicated?

    They're cashflow breakeven and could run net income negative over the next five years as a subscription market grab with the capex amortization over the 5 years.

    It is possible they could become incredibly profitable when the capex investment in 5 years is much less than the initial capex.

    Equipment costed $5 or $1/yr. Replacement equipment could cost $2.50 or $0.50/yr.

    I see this plenty with business capex for on-prem/datacenters. What costed $5M over 5 years on a refresh replacement for 1:1 replacement is usually more than half the cost.

  • Zigurd 2 years ago

    Starlink also has capex and subsequent opex for ground stations. Even with inter-satellite communications links in the 1.5gen satellites, it needs ground stations and interconnection with backbone operators.

    It is unclear if, as bad as many terrestrial ISPs are, Starlink has a TAM big enough. It's going to be slower and less reliable than terrestrial wireless, and expanding terrestrial wireless coverage is going to be cheaper for a very large percentage of potential customers. Starlink is not competitive with terrestrial fiber.

    • fragmede 2 years ago

      > expanding terrestrial wireless coverage is going to be cheaper for a very large percentage of potential customers.

      If that's the case, why has it taken until SpaceX for there to be viable Internet service to many of the rural areas they service? People are replacing 3Mbit DSL links, or even dial up (yes, in 2023, dial-up) service with starlink. terrestrial fiber beats Starlink handily, except where it hasn't been run. Which, even many urban areas still don't have gigabit fiber Internet service available, never mind when suburban or rural areas will get it (if ever). The other part of the addressable market is airplanes and boats/ships, and remote bases like McMurdo in Antarctica. Not sure how you're proposing we run fiber Internet to them.

      • Zigurd 2 years ago

        Because ISPs suck and they defrauded the government of the money that was supposed to pay for expanded broadband coverage.

        Elon has a nose for picking feckless, evil, competitors: People hate car dealers. People hate their ISP. Elon absolutely saw these opportunities.

    • linuxftw 2 years ago

      You only need downlinks to backbones if the internet is terrestrial. Who will be the first to offer the LEO datacenter?

    • ckdarby 2 years ago

      They might be able to sustain just simply via country contracts using it as a breakglass in the event of a telecommunications attack.

      I'm also seeing more commercial entities looking at it simply as a backup.

      • Zigurd 2 years ago

        There are a lot of terrestrial options for backup links: optical, microwave, fixed 5G. Generally any terrestrial link, wired or wireless, will be both higher-capacity and more reliable.

mannyv 2 years ago

Whatever you think of Musk personally, he's one of the few people trying to move the needle.

According to Wikipedia design started in 2015, which means it's taken them more than 8 years to get to cash-flow break even. This is why you need billions of dollars to get started. And that doesn't include the fact that they had to build a rocket company to launch their birds.

Looks like they picked the right 60 engineers.

They presumably also had to build all the ground stations and infrastructure to manage all those devices...unless they're using AWS Ground Control, which would be hilarious.

  • good8675309 2 years ago

    Sorry, you make good points but rocket man makes mean tweets so none of that matters. Jokes aside, I really wish we could just discuss the article instead of it turning into a flame war but this happens everytime someone posts anything that has anything to do with Musk.

    • seattle_spring 2 years ago

      > make good points but rocket man makes mean tweets so none of that matters

      Surely you're aware that this sort of comment is exactly what sparks and fans the flames of said flame wars?

goalieca 2 years ago

I can’t understate how revolutionary this technology is for those outside of dense urban center. It has even been well utilized by Ukraine in the war and is jamming resistant.

  • The_Colonel 2 years ago

    I think the military implications of Starlink/Starshield are actually the most revolutionary. The "unjammability", low latency, high throughput and the sheer amount of them (which makes it very difficult to destroy them) makes a lot of unmanned military platforms very viable. Another aspect is that it might be accessible to smaller countries which can't afford their own military satellites.

  • te_chris 2 years ago

    Unless the jamming is being performed by an anxious and needy tech mogul after a phone call with a dictator.

    • zirgs 2 years ago

      Yeah - this is why critical military infrastructure should not depend on the private sector.

      • mlindner 2 years ago

        All military technology in the us is built by the private sector, and much of it is operated by the private sector, like the military communications.

        One of the major problems in Ukraine’s case is they depended on the private sector _without a contract_ leaving them up to the pro bono will of the owner.

      • scottyah 2 years ago

        Last I heard Elon wasn't able to get more than a Secret Clearance and does not know a decent amount of what happens with Starshield

    • sneak 2 years ago

      Starlink was already shut off in Crimea because of the war. He denied a request by the Ukrainians to turn it back on in that geofence that they made specifically so that they could use it to conduct an airstrike.

      I’d have denied that request too.

      Please make sure you communicate the facts correctly when spreading this meme.

      More generally though: why do people love spreading false narratives? It’s ok not to like tech billionaires but I don’t get why they go around lying about stuff. There are plenty of legitimate criticisms of Elon Musk without making stuff up.

megaman821 2 years ago

It's cool that Starlink is sustainable. Space-based, fast internet is the infrastructure we never knew we needed. It seems too useful to fail, there are a lot of areas where satellite internet is the best choice, from airplanes, boats, remote science outposts, emergency situations, and rural communities.

rpmisms 2 years ago

This is huge. Space-based individual consumer services being profitable was a pipe dream a decade ago.

  • somethingwitty1 2 years ago

    You mean like the numerous space-based services that have been making money over the past ~30 years?

    • anthonyskipper 2 years ago

      I mostly remember them going out of business like Iridium did in 1999. Clearly the market wasn't there as no one I knew used satellite services for anything other than TV, and that model failed against broadband. Starlink is first time regular consumers like my family members actually paid for a satellite service.

  • Maxion 2 years ago

    Uhm, no? Do you think all communications satellites operate at a loss?

    • foobiekr 2 years ago

      For literally decades.

      Exactly this.

      Someday I would like to understand how we got here as a society.

      • sidibe 2 years ago

        Do you think these faceless comms companies could have achieved what a superhero's company only just now achieved?

    • bryanlarsen 2 years ago

      All current communications satellite constellations are operating profitably now, but they all went through bankruptcy proceedings before becoming profitable.

    • rpmisms 2 years ago

      Edited for clarity. Something like starlink existing and being profitable was a pipe dream a decade ago.

      • cma 2 years ago

        Is cashflow break even in the middle of a 5 year lifespan profitable? It includes the ongoing depreciation of that limited lifespan I guess?

bbatchelder 2 years ago

I personally think that Musk is kind of a dipshit when it comes to his political views, that he is a bit of a charlatan (FSD this year, I swear), that Tesla jumped the shark tank about 2-3 years ago, and I laugh every time I see more bad news about X/Twitter...

BUT I am really rooting for SpaceX and Starlink. Honestly I hope the shiny toy that is X/Twitter keeps his attention for a while and he leaves those orgs to run as they have been.

LargeTomato 2 years ago

I read an analysis by Morgan Stanley that it costs $40B to launch the entire constellation. That doesn't include the cost of the satellite, just the launches.

According to SpaceX their satellites last 5 years. That means Starlink must make, at minimum, $8B/year to maintain the constellation.

`$8B/yr / ($200/mo * 12 mo) = 3.33 Million users`

3.3 million users paying $200/mo in order to break even. The starshield contract probably covers a good amount, too.

  • montenegrohugo 2 years ago

    That's a number wrong by an order of magnitude - there's been 118 starlink launches (with many of those being rideshares).

    Falcon 9 costs 67 million for external customers, for internal use the cost will likely be lower. Let's say 50. 50 * 118 gives us a HIGH estimate of 5.6 billion, but i'd expect it to be much closer to 3-4 b.

    Satellites are relatively cheap. Total cost below 10b, certainly not 40b

  • danpalmer 2 years ago

    This is break-even on just one cost aspect though. If you add satellites, bandwidth/internet connectivity (a significant portion of the cost to service a user for traditional ISPs), renting/maintaining ground stations, marketing, and eventually R&D/offices/etc, that all rapidly increases.

    Additionally, $200/m is not price competitive compared to traditional ISPs in most of the world, $20-50 is more typical for many areas, less in Africa/Asia. Yes Starlink has a USP over traditional services, but that USP won't benefit users who are already well served by traditional ISPs, so to expand outside the remote market they will need to drop prices to compete.

    The maths could easily end up being $12bn/year / ($30/mo * 12m) = 33.3 million users. Is that a reasonable goal? That's a lot of paying users. That's a 4% market share in Europe and the US where there are highly developed telcos with decades of experience in this. That's a hard one, particular to achieve it in the near term (~5 years or one replacement cycle).

  • inemesitaffia 2 years ago

    SpaceX has never raised or made up to 40 billion. It's not hard to estimate the cost of launch and figure out that headline number is wrong

  • i67vw3 2 years ago

    Also, the business roaming plans used on airplanes, cargo ships are quite costly, I think around $2000/month.

MangoCoffee 2 years ago

"Elon Musk has repeatedly stated his intention to offer an initial public offering (IPO) for Starlink once its revenue is growing predictably enough to attract investors"

I'll buy some shares if Starlink go IPO. this break even cash flow might bring the IPO one step closer.

https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/spacex-wins-a-$70-million-sp...

  • scottyah 2 years ago

    It'll be interesting to see how they break up SpaceX employees if they IPO Starlink. SpaceX is still supposed to only IPO when they hit mars

ortusdux 2 years ago

Quick math puts the total mass of all currently orbiting starlink satellites at 1582 metric tons, which is about 3.5 x the mass of the ISS. Unless I'm mistaken, this should make them responsible for the most mass in orbit.

jauntywundrkind 2 years ago

Whomever and whatever is what % of constituents in the user-base: it was charging governments and large operators lots of money that was going to fill the coffers.

senectus1 2 years ago

If this is true then its a tipping point.

Starlink is going to start making obscene amounts of money

drannex 2 years ago

I don't trust a single thing he says at this point without evidence, I just can't possibly see it as breakeven without it, which we likely won't receive as they are a private corp.

  • next_xibalba 2 years ago

    Why does it matter to you? I am fascinated by people who have such strong opinions about Musk, particularly on the negative side. The vast majority have never met him and, if they were honest, have probably been positively impacted by him (or not at all).

    Personally, I hope it’s true. Starlink is good for the world.

    • rootusrootus 2 years ago

      Equally, I'm fascinated by people who white knight for him. I assume to some extent it must just be ideology. Objectively, he has a history of making bold claims about his products that either never come to fruition, or are delayed for years. Being skeptical of what he says is the rational choice.

      > have probably been positively impacted by him

      Well, every time my Model 3's wipers go batshit insane, I get a little irritated with his decision to forego a known good solution that the rest of the world has been using for decades. Not feeling positively impacted at that moment ;-)

      • Dig1t 2 years ago

        I have good internet because of Starlink. Before I had absolutely terrible options and there was no hope on the horizon. Starlink specifically is very good for the world, it's giving rural people access to the full experience of the internet, which people in cities have taken for granted for a long time.

        Developing reusable rockets was thought to be impossible and there was no hope for lowering the cost to orbit on the horizon _at all_ by anyone in the world, country or company. Rocket technology developed by governments is laughably bad compared to what SpaceX has built. Now, Starship promises to lower the cost to orbit to an incredibly low number and open up access to space to normal people. This is not a pie in the sky plan, the rocket is literally sitting on the pad in south Texas, waiting for bureaucratic rubber stamping so that it can launch.

        I am not white knighting, I don't care about the personal foibles of the man running the thing, I am cheering on science, technology, and the progress of the human species.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 years ago

        > he has a history of making bold claims about his products that either never come to fruition

        To my knowledge, he has never lied about the present financial state of his companies. That gives him credibility in a way e.g. Yaccarino bullshitting about what fraction of Twitter’s advertisers have returned does not.

        • Atreiden 2 years ago
          • theultdev 2 years ago

            Then a jury ruled in Musk's favor, right?

            https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/03/cars/musk-tesla-tweet-lawsuit...

            The end result is left out every time the "court finds" articles are linked. The jury found the opposite, which is what actually matters.

            • Atreiden 2 years ago

              The jury finding was that he was not personally liable for investor losses, not that his tweet was in fact accurate.

              The facts are not in dispute here. He tweeted "funding secured" and funding was not secured. He announced intentions to take it private at a given price, which did not happen.

              He misrepresented the financial state of his company.

            • rootusrootus 2 years ago

              Well, a jury also ruled that his pedo comments were totally okay, so I don't know if I'd use that as a metric for what constitutes truth.

              • theultdev 2 years ago

                Well, courts have also persecuted and jailed innocent people so if you don't trust what a jury of your peers say you should also have a hard time trusting what a "court finds".

                Do you agree with that logic or do you trust the courts over your peers?

                (ie. what "metric" would you use "for what constitutes truth"?)

            • TheLoafOfBread 2 years ago
              • theultdev 2 years ago

                Timely! Now do the courts (or have those been perfect over the decades?)

                Under that logic, maybe Musk is just another African American being persecuted by the US government.

                • TheLoafOfBread 2 years ago

                  Jury is mob-based justice. If mobs likes you, then you are basically immune to consequences as illustrated by the link above.

                  • theultdev 2 years ago

                    You ignored my statements. Evaluate the courts.

                    We're all waiting on the edge of our seats to know what your ideal judicial system is.

                    Btw you've never had jury duty? Did you vote in a mob form? I sure hope not. I haven't.

                    • TheLoafOfBread 2 years ago

                      Anything else than jury mob rule is better judical system.

                      • theultdev 2 years ago

                        You still didn't answer the questions.

                        No jury I've been on has functioned that way. Have you acted that way?

                        If you don't support a system of a jury of your peers determining your guilt, what do you support?

                  • JumpCrisscross 2 years ago

                    > Jury is mob-based justice

                    Have you served on an American jury?

        • NoMoreNicksLeft 2 years ago

          I'm mostly neutral in all things Musk. I can make arguments without appealing to his virtue or criticizing his flaws.

          I've been reading about low-orbit satellite since at least the late 1990s when it must have been Slashdot articles then. There have been several plans, but the one whose name I remember was Iridium. I believe it became operational, but only ever managed to be used for voice telephony. It's been bankrupted and bought by other companies since then.

          This is an absurdly difficult market to break into, and everyone has failed to one degree or another, with the degrees of failure all clustering around the really extreme end of that spectrum. This is ignoring any technological challenge (of which there are apparently more than a few).

          He is claiming to have done a (business) thing that has been demonstrated to be nearly impossible. A thing which, if he hasn't done it and is merely lying about, we might not know for months or years.

          It is perfectly reasonable to be skeptical of this, and no one owes him the benefit of doubt on this issue or any other. It is perfectly reasonable to remain skeptical even if you do not believe the man a liar. It is an extraordinary claim, and requires extraordinary evidence.

        • benzible 2 years ago

          See: https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:https:...

          Capital Raise

          4,281 days since Elon Musk said Tesla will never need to raise capital again. (2/12/2012)

          "Tesla does not need to ever raise another funding round." Elon Musk, quoted by John Voelcker in Green Car Reports

          4,052 days since Elon Musk raised $195.7M in common stock. (9/28/2012)

          3,822 days since Elon Musk raised $313M in common stock. (5/16/2013) 3,822 days since Elon Musk raised $600M in convertible notes. (5/16/2013)

          [...]

          1,157 days since Elon Musk raised $5B in common stock. (9/1/2020)

          1,059 days since Elon Musk raised $5B in common stock. (12/8/2020)

          • e63f67dd-065b 2 years ago

            With Tesla stock as overvalued as it is, he'll be really dumb to not sell issue more. Tesla is the original meme stock: if people are willing to pay much more for AMC/BBBY/whatever meme stock than it would otherwise be worth, you should get in front of the money printing machine and issue more stock. Good for him.

      • mrangle 2 years ago

        In fairness, and while Musk cerainly has a fan club, the "white knighting" tends to be in response to the aforementioned hating. Not the inverse.

        There are few such men, and arguably fewer who have the enthusiastic haters that Musk does.

        I understand criticism. However, a (multiple) path of innovation is always going to be riddled with mistakes and failures. Within this context, the specific enthusiasm for hating Musk, by some, seems petty to others.

      • good8675309 2 years ago

        So if we don't dog-pile on a specific tech CEO and give the rest a pass we are white knights? I like to push back against the crowd when I see irrational dog-piling. Why is it that when Facebook is mentioned, the comments aren't trashing Zuckerberg in every other comment like when Musk is mentioned? Like he gets a free pass. That actually seems more ideologically driven, especially when you compare what Musk has done for humanity versus the destruction that Zuckerberg has brought. And I have deep concerns about Musk but I'm not irrational about it and I'm not constantly outraged and triggered when I see his name or companies mentioned.

        Edit: Lol, bring on the downvotes, it only serves to prove my point.

        • coding123 2 years ago

          The funny thing about Zuckerberg is that he's also shifting to the right if you watched some videos about the FBI discussing covid. I mean come on, Zuck showed up on Joe Rogan!

        • rootusrootus 2 years ago

          > So if we don't dog-pile on a specific tech CEO and give the rest a pass we are white knights?

          No, white knighting is accusing skeptics of being emotional haters who just don't appreciate all the good that Musk brings to the world. Accusing them of being short sellers, etc. Jumping to the defense of someone who is more than capable of defending himself.

        • badlucklottery 2 years ago

          > So if we don't dog-pile on a specific tech CEO and give the rest a pass we are white knights?

          The problem with bringing up those other tech CEOs vs. actually defending Musk is it starts looking like whataboutism.

          I personally think there's enough hate for tech CEOs to go around and we don't need to ration it out.

          • good8675309 2 years ago

            Sure, but it's just when I see Facebook, Google, etc mentioned in a headline, I see rational conversation about the topic, but when I see a Musk company mentioned in a headline, I already know what the comments are going to look like.

            • rootusrootus 2 years ago

              Do you assign any responsibility for that to Elon? Compared to the CEOs of Facebook, Google, etc, Elon engages in far more incendiary rhetoric every day. He's chosen to become an outspoken public figure, criticism comes with the territory. Especially when it is tribal politics.

              • good8675309 2 years ago

                Sure, he has full responsibility for it and he seems to have embraced it but while Elon is outspoken, the other big tech CEOs are just as engaged in politics, they are just more effective and quiet about it which to me is much more insidious. I'm sure they love watching Elon get all the attention, it takes the pressure off of them. As they influence policy, have armies of attorneys and lobbyists, buy senators, etc. At this point they are more powerful than our own government and our representatives are useless except for the rare virtue signal about keeping big tech accountable. I don't put Elon or any of his companies in that category when it comes to power, so he is less of a threat in my opinion. But I get it, HN is definitely a place where the tribal outrage comes out of the woodwork, it's likely because of the demographic here is of people that mostly benefit from the technocratic system so they see Elon as a threat to that or something.

          • theultdev 2 years ago

            You missed his point. He's saying not picking up a mob pitchfork and challenging irrational statements does not mean you are white-knighting.

            He's not saying "look over at that other CEO".

            Even still, it's not whataboutism to put things in perspective as you may see that you're blowing one thing out of proportion due to bias if those same values are being violated by another entity but you are okay with it because of the entity itself.

            It's always a good exercise to check for contradictions in your values.

    • solumunus 2 years ago

      What a ridiculous standard for deciding whether you respect someone or not. Public figures can give you plenty of valid reasons for disliking them without having met them. I could list endless public figures from past and present which you almost certainly don’t like because of their words and actions.

    • webkike 2 years ago

      I haven’t met him, but he has bought out my favorite social media website solely so he can insert his insipid opinions and comments, so I think the negative reactions are warranted.

      Why do people always talk about needing to meet a guy to have an opinion on them? I haven’t met Dick Cheney either

      • next_xibalba 2 years ago

        > he has bought out my favorite social media websites solely so he can insert his insipid opinions and comments

        Can you share a link that documents him saying this? Every statement I've heard is something to the effect of "to preserve a space for free speech." If you can't produce evidence, you're assuming intent. That's your bias, and it isn't rooted in reality.

        > Why do people always talk about needing to meet a guy to have an opinion on them?

        I think its more a question of the degree to which people care. Dick Cheney was integral in launching wars that spent trillions and killed millions. Compare that to Musk who is probably more responsible than any other single person for reviving both the electrification of transport and the reviving of space exploration. All via companies that you're perfectly able to completely ignore. Meanwhile, Cheney used public treasure to mire the U.S. in foreverwars. Do these two people seem even remotely equivalent to you? Do both seem worthy of your very strong opinions?

      • snapplebobapple 2 years ago

        I don't think that's the main reason he bought it. It looks to me like he's trying to create a knockoff of the baidu app for the non chinese language sphere where one can conduct their whole life through the app (think twitter + whatsapp/telegram/signal/teams + your banking + online purchases + delivery). If he pulls it off he's going to be a lot richer regardless of the up front pain point of far leftie aversion to freedom of speech kneecapping legacy revenue streams in the short to medium term.

        As with everything Elon does, one should wait and see because he has had decent success turning things that seemed stupid money pits at the time (i.e. electric cars and rockets) into legitimate companies disrupting what was thought to be entrenched markets. Also, to my knowledge he has never pulled share structure Bullshit in his companies which makes it possible for his shareholders to fire him if enough don't like what he is doing, something I can't say about the other big tech CEOs, and something that deserves respect in its own right regardless of your opinions of anything else the guy has done.

        • TaylorAlexander 2 years ago

          > regardless of the up front pain point of far leftie aversion to freedom of speech kneecapping legacy revenue streams

          Musk is not in favor of free speech, he is in favor of allowing speech he likes to get a free pass while limiting the speech of people and groups he disagrees with. The left does not like what he is doing because they disagree with which speech he is allowing and which speech he is blocking. What I have seen lately is users reporting trouble for accounts which support Palestine (which are not making any posts which violate twitter rules). And of course Musk is supportive of accounts which primarily exist to harass trans people, which is justifiably upsetting for people who just want trans people to be able to exist without harassment. But it's not about "free speech" it's about who gets to control the speech. The "free speech" line is just a convenient narrative.

          • snapplebobapple 2 years ago

            I don't think you are correct about free speech being a means to a different end rather than an end in itself for him. He has stated he is in favor of free speech and has converted the rules and enforcement to focus on things breaking the law, which is a reasonable thing to do if your position is supporting freedom of speech because the refining system for the law is based around constitutional ideas of free speech (among other things). I agree that that would make him supportive of accounts that violate far left ideas of what should be allowed to be said to anyone because freedom of speech necessitates putting up with a bunch of ugly things being said that fall short of illegal speech rather than just irrationally and incorrectly claiming words are violence and banning all ugly from the conversation.

            • TaylorAlexander 2 years ago

              It's not just permitting speech the left doesn't like. I don't care enough to follow this closely and have a bunch of sources at the ready, but it seems that left leaning accounts which do not violate the rules are being targeted by twitter in various ways. There was a pro-palestine account which people said they would follow and then go back and somehow see they were not following it. And some words can imply violence - for example doxxing is "just words" but presents real world risks to people, and there are other forms of harassment which are seemingly against twitter rules which is being permitted. Famously the libsoftiktok account posts a lot of harassment of trans people, and internal leakers at twitter show that this account has been flagged to prevent it from being banned even when it violates community standards.

              So actual rule violating accounts are purportedly being protected, while left leaning accounts which do not violate rules are being manipulated behind the scenes, if the reports are to be believed.

              Again I recognize that I have not provided sources and I don't expect you to just take me at my word, but I wanted to correct what you think I am saying. I am not just concerned with uncomfortable speech, but outright harassment and the apparent suppression of certain left leaning accounts. That is why I say it is about controlling the narrative.

              EDIT: Did a couple of quick searches. Banning journalists for being critical of Musk/Twitter isn't very free speech oriented!

              December 2022

              https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/journalists-who-wrote-ab...

              April 2023

              https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2023/04/elon-musk-twitter-st...

      • nradov 2 years ago

        I don't care about Musk one way or another, but let's not forget how the previous Twitter management frequently used their position of power to censor and suppress messages they didn't like.

        https://nypost.com/2022/12/02/twitter-invented-a-reason-to-h...

        https://reason.com/2023/01/02/under-government-pressure-twit...

    • JauntyHatAngle 2 years ago

      I don't really see why it would be surprising. He is an influential figure that is greatly impacting tech, culture and politics.

      For better or worse is up to the individual opinion, but its not really weird to have a strong view on a polarising figure, especially one with the influence of musk.

    • failbuffer 2 years ago

      Truth in tech matters to this audience, at least to the engineers. Musk had repeatedly overpromised and undelivered ("full self-driving"), made preposterous claims (2019: Tesla Semi convoy FSD is "something we can do today"), and engaged in fraudulent behavior (SolarCity or the "funding secured" tweet).

      You can love him because rockets, EVs, and enormous satellite constellations are pretty cool, but you'd be a fool to trust him.

    • andrewmutz 2 years ago

      Many people have strong opinions about Musk because he is intentionally inflammatory. He works hard for those negative opinions. To choose just one example of him clearly trying to generate engagement/outrage:

      https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1601894132573605888

    • matthewdgreen 2 years ago

      I don’t think you have to hate Musk or Starlink to be skeptical about any claim he makes about the cash flow of his non-public businesses. He’s spent the past year saying ridiculous things and making promises about Twitter that didn’t check out. Credibility is a non-renewable resource. With that said, you don’t have to have strong feelings about this particular issue. But if you’re commenting on this article it’s a very reasonable sentiment.

    • jacquesm 2 years ago

      Musk has gone to substantial lengths to undermine his own credibility and you wonder why people question his statements? It's not even a 'strong opinion' at this point, it's just reality: Musk can be trusted for what he says. It may be true, it may not be true. It may be technically true. But you'll never know until you've seen the evidence with your own eyes.

    • TaylorAlexander 2 years ago

      Having met Musk is irrelevant when deciding whether to trust the public statements of someone who has a long and well documented history of lying in public statements. In particular he has repeatedly lied about business related details, most notably claims of self driving readiness.

      It doesn’t require strong opinions about Musk to understand the value in taking what he says with skepticism.

    • mckirk 2 years ago

      People value trustworthiness, and Musk's track record with public statements about his businesses definitely isn't the best in that regard -- though that largely concerns the utopian predictions/promises he likes to make, I suppose. Maybe statements of his about the current state of affairs are more reliable.

    • benzible 2 years ago

      Do you actually limit your opinions to people you've met, based on your personal interactions with them? Do you consider your personal impressions of someone to be a better way of evaluating their truthfulness than the public record of their past statements?

      Musk's record is quite clear at this point: https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:https:...

    • wg0 2 years ago

      OP has only expressed lack of confidence in the statements Elon makes. Objectively speaking, there are plenty of examples where it has been the case that let's say, there were "alternate facts" involved.

      And no, it is not about predictions of this being done by that year alone.

    • zachrip 2 years ago

      You do not need to meet someone to form an opinion of them.

    • capableweb 2 years ago

      > The vast majority have never met him and, if they were honest, have probably been positively impacted by him (or not at all).

      Why would people most probably been positively impacted by him? He seems to constantly have knee-jerk reactions to things happening around him, and his companies seems to frequently have issues with overworking employees.

      • Tepix 2 years ago

        2 examples:

        He's accelerated the switch to electric cars.

        He's made transport to space a lot cheaper, saving a lot of taxpayer's money.

        • rootusrootus 2 years ago

          He didn't create Tesla, though I'll grant him some credit for creating a combination of product and hype that made for a popular EV.

          Gwynne gets all the credit for SpaceX IMO. Elon gets credit for letting her succeed.

          • adventured 2 years ago

            > Gwynne gets all the credit for SpaceX IMO

            It was nice of her to have the idea, pursue that idea through financial hell across many years, bankroll the start of the business top to bottom, use all of her connections to get it outside funded, and sustain it financially personally to the direct threat of personal bankruptcy.

            Good thing she did all that and gets all the credit.

          • suoduandao3 2 years ago

            Do you think she could have done it without him?

            Everyone loves the Teslas and hates the Edisons, but the world does need Edisons.

          • inemesitaffia 2 years ago

            Tesla was an idea. The Tesla you see today is his doing. Eberhard would have ended up like Wework without the Newmann payout.

            Remember the Tesla deathwatch blog?

        • capableweb 2 years ago

          > He's accelerated the switch to electric cars.

          Which, in today's industry and world might have been too early as we still haven't figured out if mining all that lithium is better for the world or not, right now.

          > He's made transport to space a lot cheaper, saving a lot of taxpayer's money.

          Yeah, for ~4% of the world's taxpayers. We'll still see if SpaceX is a net-win for humanity, too early to tell.

        • ahahahahah 2 years ago

          > He's accelerated the switch to electric cars.

          There's not evidence for that. In fact, by being willing to lose so much money on each car Tesla likely discouraged the broader industry from investing in electric cars for many years. Tesla may have, in fact, made the switch to electric cars slower than it otherwise would have been.

      • steve_adams_86 2 years ago

        Overworking is subjective. In his opinion that’s just how hard people should work on things that matter and that they care about.

        I agree with you. I don’t think it’s worth working that hard for someone else. No one will remember someone who works for Musk. They won’t earn more than they could somewhere else. To each their own, though. I worked incredibly hard on much stupider things in my past.

    • lemper 2 years ago

      not him. but I just can't trust any words of him since many years ago without any hard proof. as for his impacts, I spent the last 20 minutes thinking what has he done that positively impact me and found nothing.

    • chung8123 2 years ago

      I don't think starlink's private ownership is good for the world. I don't know enough about space but I hope there is room up there for a publicly owned satellite internet system.

    • geepytee 2 years ago

      Musk has and is changing the world, change always makes people nervous.

    • not_wyoming 2 years ago

      It's possible to admire the impact of Musk's products while also scrutinizing the things he says on Twitter

    • Waterluvian 2 years ago

      I think Starlink has colossal potential to do tremendous good in the world. That's exactly why I care so much about how much control and impact a character like Musk has. Would suck if my ISP suddenly just started sending me dank memes and poop emojis one day because the CEO got broken up with.

      • beepbooptheory 2 years ago

        The fact that, at this point, this is not a totally ridiculous thing to be concerned about is very surreal but also pretty funny honestly.

        • Waterluvian 2 years ago

          It’s absolutely hilarious when it’s something like Twitter. When it’s an ISP or a rocket or an autonomous car, I laugh a wee bit less. XD

    • llbeansandrice 2 years ago

      Isn't he in trouble with the SEC for things he's said on twitter about his companies? I think it's entirely reasonable to be skeptical of the things he says, particularly ones that make himself look good, with no evidence, and is unverifiable since Starlink isn't public.

    • footlose_3815 2 years ago

      Conversely, I am fascinated by people who have such strong opinions about Musk in the other direction. Those who jump to defend him. Those who put all his lies, deception, xenophobia, and record of publicly humiliating himself.

      I'll never take anything he says at face value because anything that's ever come out of his mouth is posturing.

      I'm frankly tired of billionaire windbags like him. I have no idea how someone could be a fan of his.

    • NelsonMinar 2 years ago

      Well here we are talking about his latest statement. I think it bears examination whether what he says is trustworthy.

    • alienicecream 2 years ago

      It doesn't bother you to see someone take advantage of people's naivety with false promises?

    • slibhb 2 years ago

      People are just making a friend-enemy distinction. If they judge Elon positively (friend), they minimize his flaws; if they judge him negatively (enemy), they minimize his contributions.

    • fredgrott 2 years ago

      honestly it is from Elon's own history....

      1. His only software contribution at PayPal was torn out and discarded 2. After his software at paypal was rejected he was fired by the board at paypal.

      It is not that he does not have business skills to market. It is that he presents himself as someone that does quality engineering..which in fact is somewhat false.

    • shafyy 2 years ago

      After the shit he has said and pulled in the past few years, you are "fascinated" that many people don't like Musk? Really?

    • 2OEH8eoCRo0 2 years ago

      > Starlink is good for the world.

      It wasn't good for Ukraine when Musk pulled the plug on them.

      • adventured 2 years ago

        Which is overshadowed drastically - 1,000 to 1 at least - by the good Starlink has done for Ukraine. That's about the weakest straw argument I've seen against Starlink.

        Musk's SpaceX is the only reason Ukraine has been able to maintain its Internet infrastructure throughout the war. It would have been a communications disaster otherwise, particularly for all non-military (NATO would have done its best to provide patch-work communications for the military).

        • 2OEH8eoCRo0 2 years ago

          Maybe, but he also interfered in a rather large Ukrainian operation to Russia's benefit.

          https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/08/world/europe/elon-musk-uk...

          > Elon Musk foiled an attack on Russia’s Black Sea fleet last year

          > Mykhailo Podolyak, a top adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky, accused Mr. Musk of enabling Russian aggression. Because of Mr. Musk’s decision, “civilians, children are being killed,” he wrote on X on Thursday. “This is the price of a cocktail of ignorance and big ego.”

          > a SpaceX executive said that Starlink had taken steps to curtail Ukraine’s use of the technology to control drones, infuriating Ukrainian officials.

  • bryanlarsen 2 years ago

    You don't receive it, but there a several large institutional investors who do, and who could sue for billions if he's lying. It's not something non-actionable like saying "FSD this year".

    More significantly, both NASA and the Space Force receive SpaceX financial statements because they require reassurance that all their vendors are viable ongoing concerns.

    IOW, if this is a lie, then he could lose his 2 biggest customers. And I wouldn't be surprised if lying to the Space Force is an actual crime.

    • JonChesterfield 2 years ago

      Huh. So Space Force, which I was really sure is a joke, appears to be an actual thing complete with employees and things with wings. At least Wikipedia thinks so. Strange world to live in.

      • dragonwriter 2 years ago

        Space Force was created by breaking out existing capacities from the Air Force into a new subordinate organization within the Department of the Air Force (similar to the way the US Army Air Forces were split off into a new service to create the Air Force, but with a relation to the parent like the Marines have to the Navy.)

        It was a reorg with elaborate branding impacts, not a from-scratch creation.

  • minimaxir 2 years ago

    Or it's Twitter/X's "not including the cost of servicing debt, the company already is cash flow positive."

    https://slate.com/technology/2023/10/x-linda-yaccarino-debt-...

  • toomuchtodo 2 years ago

    I own some SpaceX, am happy to take the chance without access to audited financials. Could go to zero, or maybe my kids will go to the moon.

    • suoduandao3 2 years ago

      How'd you get in on that? Sounds like it could be an interesting story.

      • toomuchtodo 2 years ago

        Private equity marketplace as an accredited investor. I am a degenerate gambler at heart.

        • suoduandao3 2 years ago

          Cool. If I die childless I'm considering willing my assets to a company like SpaceX or Blue Origin - any suggestions on which or should I just split it among the leaders at the time?

          • toomuchtodo 2 years ago

            No suggestions on who unfortunately. A potential methodology is establishing a living trust, funding it with all of your wealth, a pour-over will to clean up anything you missed, and assign the beneficiaries accordingly based on your post life wishes (you should be able to trivially get SpaceX, Blue Origin, etcs EIN/taxpayer ID, although you would want to speak with someone at those orgs so they know your plan and someone can admin whatever is sent their way). Same as you would with charitable bequests as part of your estate, directed towards charities and non profits.

            Not an attorney, not your attorney, speak with one for estate planning purposes. Hope this helps!

  • RC_ITR 2 years ago

    The "trick" here is that he is likely speaking of operational cashflows (i.e. the 'correct' metric for low CAPEX companies).

    The rub, of course, is that most of the cost for something like Starlink is designing, building, and launching the satellites, which shows up in investing cashflows.

    Put differently, if the company was actually generating more cash than it consumes on all levels, start the IPO right now and SpaceX will be a $1tn+ company (instead of a $100bn+ company that people expect will one day generate cash and then be a $1tn+ company).

    • dunmalg 2 years ago

      SpaceX will never have an IPO because being publicly traded means ceding a certain degree of control. The founders' goal is to make life multiplanetary, and the typical goal of rando shareholders is to pump up the stock price. They don't want to have to deal with the latter. They may at some point spin off Starlink and IPO that, but not until it's fully deployed and not heavily dependent on frequent, super cheap, low bureaucratic friction launch services from SpaceX.

  • jvanderbot 2 years ago

    I suspect government contacts. And not US government contracts necessarily.

  • belter 2 years ago

    Cash flow break-even is measured over a specific accounting period, which could be monthly, quarterly, or ...over the last hour... Without specifying the time frame, the statement is not relevant.

  • rayiner 2 years ago

    I’m not a huge Musk fan, but his shortcoming seems to be more having unreasonable projections about the future. I’m not aware of him lying about things in the present.

  • MagicMoonlight 2 years ago

    If it’s privately owned then he has less reason to lie

  • good8675309 2 years ago

    So you trust public corps? Like Microsoft, Google, Facebook, etc. Are you this outraged anytime Sundar is mentioned or Satya or Zuckerberg, or any number of these other mega corp CEOs are mentioned? Because they are deeply corrupt and actively work against the people in the name of profits and power. I don't understand how Musk has become some boogey man to the chronically online types, sure he is self interested and focused on profits and power but no more so than all of these other tech CEOs.

kossTKR 2 years ago

Isn't Starlink basically a part of the US military-industrial complex hiding behind stories of private enterprise, just like many other Silicon Valley companies intricate relationship with the security state as laid out in Yasha Levines Surveillance Valley?

  • doublemint2203 2 years ago

    you're thinking of Starshield

    • kossTKR 2 years ago

      Actually not, infrastructure has great geopolitical and geostrategic importance as laid out in the book just mentioned by Levine.

      Those who control the data flow, access, search etc. control surveillance and the minds of the masses which is why funding is often seen from the sec state.

  • seydor 2 years ago

    most definitely yes. they can see me typing now

  • GartzenDeHaes 2 years ago

    Military industrial MEDIA complex.

bparsons 2 years ago

Seems highly credible!

slowhadoken 2 years ago

Congratulations.

olalonde 2 years ago

Wait, all the HN commenters who asserted this would never happen were wrong?

technojamin 2 years ago

Here's a great video by Ordinary Things that talks about the development and proliferation of satellites over the past century, space debris, and how things could play out in the near future: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90N6IZnV85c

Especially relevant because Starlink has been causing numerous near-collisions over the past few years.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection