The Mercury News

Bezos, Musk have different ideas about how to pay for space race

- Tom Metcalf

Jeff Bezos sold $4 billion of Amazon.com Inc. stock in the past three years, including $1.1 billion last week, using most of the money to support his space company, Blue Origin LLC.

That sets its business model apart from other billionair­e-backed space ventures, Elon Musk’s Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp. and Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic, which have both taken outside funding and moved more quickly to commercial­ize operations.

“As the world’s richest man, Bezos has a unique ability to develop his own space transporta­tion company and maintain 100 percent ownership,” said Chad Anderson, chief executive officer of Space Angels Holdings, a spacefocus­ed investment fund. “This is different than almost every other space company, which must build excitement and momentum to attract equity investors or NASA funding.”

There’s a clear difference with Musk’s SpaceX, which sought to generate revenue as soon as possible after its founding in 2002. Securing commercial launch contracts helped the Hawthorne, California-based firm generate a small operating profit on $1 billion of revenue in 2014, the Wall Street Journal reported in January.

SpaceX, a pioneer in reusing rockets to drive down costs, has a $1.6 billion contract with the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion to resupply the Internatio­nal Space Station and a second pact valued at as much as $2.6 billion to transport crews to the orbiting lab. Earlier this year, the company was awarded its second contract to fly missions for the U.S. Air Force, and it plans to send two private citizens on a trip around the moon in late 2018.

The commercial successes — along with a series of funding rounds that raised more than $1.5 billion from investors such as Google, valuing the company at more than $20 billion — allowed Musk, 46, to grow SpaceX without continuall­y relying on his personal fortune, despite the industry’s intensive capital requiremen­ts. He’s also the CEO and largest shareholde­r of Tesla Inc., which accounts for about half of Musk’s $19.7 billion fortune, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Branson’s Virgin Galactic, which aims to send paying tourists into suborbital space for a few minutes of weightless­ness, also has taken on outside investment, with Abu Dhabi’s government investment company ponying up almost $400 million for a minority stake in 2009. Saudi Arabia’s sovereign-wealth fund said last month that it plans to invest about $1 billion in Virgin’s space endeavors.

Spokesmen for SpaceX and Virgin Galactic parent Virgin Group Ltd. declined to comment. Amazon and Blue Origin didn’t reply to requests for comment.

Such investment­s are becoming more common. About 250 private space ventures received $11 billion in equity financing since 2009, according to an October report by Space Angels.

Bezos, however, has steered clear of that route to maintain absolute control, a costly approach. Selling stock to fund his operations means Bezos, 53, could face $200 million in capital-gains taxes on last week’s transactio­ns. He told a space conference in April that he sells about $1 billion of Amazon stock each year to fund Blue Origin.

But with shares of the Seattle-based retailer on a tear, Bezos has more to burn than just rocket fuel. Last month, he overtook Microsoft Corp. cofounder Bill Gates as the world’s richest person, and ended Monday with a net worth of $95.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg index.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? After founding SpaceX in 2002, CEO Elon Musk sought outside funding.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS After founding SpaceX in 2002, CEO Elon Musk sought outside funding.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Amazon founder Jeff Bezos used his own money to fund his plans for space.
GETTY IMAGES Amazon founder Jeff Bezos used his own money to fund his plans for space.

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