City
Epaper

$1.5 billion Apple-Globalstar deal to transform direct to device satellite game

By IANS | Updated: November 6, 2024 11:05 IST

New Delhi, Nov 6 The $1.5 billion Apple-Globalstar deal packs a competitive punch for virtually all corners of ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 6 The $1.5 billion Apple-Globalstar deal packs a competitive punch for virtually all corners of the connectivity market ecosystem, from carriers to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), according to a report on Wednesday.

Apple plans to invest $1.1 billion in satellite communications company Globalstar, alongside a further $400 million for a 20 per cent equity stake in the business.

According to Emma Mohr-McClune, Chief Analyst, Technology at GlobalData, this is arguably the largest and most significant consumer OEM low-Earth-orbit (LEO) deal to date, and the arrangement puts Apple in a clear leading position among western OEMs for extended direct and mass-market voice satellite texting and even calling services for both emergency and remote use cases.

“In addition to continuing to allocate 85 per cent of its network capacity to Apple, Globalstar will use the $1.1 billion in preservice payments to deliver a new satellite service constellation, expanded ground infrastructure, and increased global mobile satellite services (MSS) licensing,” said Mohr-McClune.

The new arrangement represents a significant expansion of an earlier 2022 deal, which first gave iPhone 14 users access to Globalstar’s 31 L-band satellites for emergency text services – a service which has since been extended to remote or off-grid use cases with iOS 18.

According to the report, the Apple-Globalstar arrangement also lowers the incentive for mobile network operators to strike their own deals with satellite providers for connectivity.

“There is now no doubt that Apple iPhone users are likely to have faster, readier access to more sophisticated and extended D2D use case services regardless of their wireless connectivity provider,” said the report.

It can no longer be claimed that Apple has no interest in the connectivity business.

On the downside, Apple’s B2C direct monetisation plans for this investment are still hazy, and premium plans are likely still several quarters out, the report mentioned.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIPL 2025: Heated Exchange Between Virat Kohli and KL Rahul During RCB vs DC Match; Video Goes Viral

Other SportsI was desperate to win for the most beautiful club in the world, says Liverpool captain Van Dijk on PL triumph

NagpurNagpur Road Rage: 21-Year-Old Truck Driver Stabbed to Death for Overtaking in Maharashtra

EntertainmentRupert Grint welcomes second child with Georgia Groome

Other SportsIPL 2025: Pandya’s all-round show takes RCB on top of points table, beat DC by six wickets

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSolid monetary frameworks helped emerging markets navigate recent crises: Gita Gopinath

BusinessPiyush Goyal lashes out at Big Pharma for evergreening patents

BusinessSEBI joins DigiLocker to reduce unclaimed assets, protect nominees’ interests

BusinessOver 170 million lifted above poverty line in India, Modi government and Congress claim credit

BusinessIndia, as fastest growing economy, is ideal investment destination: RBI Governor