Editor's note: Yesterday, Shubhanshu Shukla became the first Indian to travel to space after more than 40 years. This has once again brought space stocks in focus in the Indian market. If you are not convinced about the big spacetech opportunity in India, we recommend this editorial by Equitymaster's Co-Head of Research, Tanushree Banerjee.
Image source: Brandon Moser/www.istockphoto.comIn 2022, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) turned 50.
The institution's R&D activities over last 5 decades were reasonably secretive, if not obscure. They were certainly not in the realm of commoners like us to track.
So, space related commercial activities were almost unthinkable. But in the last few years, things changed. And dramatically so.
Most of the changes germinated in the space startups.
But how many private Spacetech companies have you heard of apart from SpaceX?
Well, if you haven't heard of many, be prepared for it now.
For instance, in 2018, two undergraduate students at BITS Pilani were working on artificial intelligence project. They faced a problem. Their analysis was handicapped by the lack of high-resolution satellite imagery data.
They soon realised there is a market for a satellite company to offer high-resolution imagery data. This was the start of Pixxel Space, a space tech startup which offers high resolution satellite imagery.
Dhruva Space founder Sanjay Nekkanti's obsession with satellites began when he was still in college. The country was basking in the success of Chandrayaan-1, India's first moon mission. The space programme had generated a lot of interest among students.
ISRO decided to tap into this frenzy and asked universities to encourage students to build satellites. It offered to deploy the student satellites in orbit for free.
Chennai's SRM University was among the earliest to take up this offer. Nekkanti, who was pursuing a bachelor's degree in electronics and telecommunication joined the team of students. The student-made satellite, SRMSat, was designed to address pollution in the atmosphere. It was launched into orbit by ISRO in October 2011.
Eventually Nekkanti realised his spacetech ambitions by setting up Dhruva Space in 2012.
The company now offers end-to-end services-building satellites, launching, tracking and maintaining them. By 2022 it had raised US$ 8 million in funding. Also, it has orders to put three satellites in space. Many foreign entities are in talks with Dhruva Space to build and launch their satellites.
Apart from Dhruva, a clutch of space startups, including Agnikul Cosmos, Skyroot Aerospace, Digantara and Pixxel, are building and launching rockets, engines, as well as satellites. There are meant to accomplish everything from generating high-resolution pictures of earth to tackling space debris.
As expected, they have investors making a beeline for Indian spacetech.
Whether or not Spacex comes to India, the Indian space tech ecosystem is large enough to attract billions in funding and innovate to make India a commercial space tech hub.
Mind you, the spacetech ecosystem is brand new and much bigger than that of electric vehicles.
The key catalyst for the Spacetech sector was the launch of Indian Space Association (ISpA) in 2021. Its founding members included L&T, Tata Group, MapmyIndia, Walchandnagar Industries, and Bharti Airtel's OneWeb.
As per Indian Space Association (ISpA), the investment in India space startups has grown at a compounded rate of over 94% since 2016.
Thus, since 2021 India's space sector is witnessing its post liberalisation phase.
And if you invest well, there could be significant wealth generating opportunities.
They could, eventually, be massive wealth creators just like Defence stocks have been since 2019.
Now, unlike the defence sector which already had multiple listed stocks, with credible financials, most space tech startups are yet to mature. Hence, as an investor you need to be patient to ride the boom.
Warm regards,
Tanushree Banerjee
Editor, StockSelect
Equitymaster Agora Research Private Limited (Research Analyst)
Tanushree Banerjee (Research Analyst), is the editor of Stock Select and Forever Stocks. Tanushree started her career at Equitymaster covering the banking and financial sector stocks and scrutinising RBI policies. Over the last decade, she developed Equitymaster's research processes that helped us pick out various multibaggers, across all sectors. A firm believer of "safety first" when it comes to investing, Tanushree closely follows the investing philosophies of Warren Buffett, Jeremy Grantham, and Joel Greenblatt.
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