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Planet Ventures Offers Public Investors a Gateway to Private Space Companies

By FisherVista
Planet Ventures Inc. provides public market exposure to private space companies like Antaris, Relativity Space, and General Astronautics, which are typically only accessible to venture and institutional capital.
Planet Ventures Offers Public Investors a Gateway to Private Space Companies

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. Planet Ventures Inc. (CSE: PXI) (OTC: PNXPF) aims to bridge that gap, offering shareholders exposure to a portfolio of private companies operating across multiple segments of the expanding space economy.

One of those portfolio companies recently achieved a milestone: 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. This collaboration underscores the shift from merely launching satellites to managing them in orbit, a crucial evolution as the space economy matures.

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. However, many innovative private space companies remain inaccessible to the public.

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. This is significant because the next frontier in space isn’t just launching satellites—it’s managing them. As the number of satellites in orbit grows, the demand for in-space services like surveillance, communication, and debris management will increase.

The implications for investors are substantial. The global space economy is projected to grow significantly, and companies like Antaris, which focuses on software-defined infrastructure, are poised to play a critical role. By investing in Planet Ventures, individuals can gain exposure to these emerging technologies without the barriers of direct private equity investment.

However, investing in Planet Ventures and its portfolio companies involves a high degree of risk. Portfolio companies have limited operating histories and are pre-revenue, making investments speculative and potentially resulting in a total loss of capital. Technology risks also loom, as orbital energy and lunar habitation technologies underlying the company’s investments are unproven at commercial scale. Regulatory hurdles, market demand uncertainties, and liquidity risks further complicate the investment landscape.

For more information on Planet Ventures, visit the company’s newsroom at https://ibn.fm/PNXPF. This article is informational only and is solely for use by prospective investors in determining whether to seek additional information. It does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities.

FisherVista

FisherVista

@fishervista